How Government Experts Self-Sabotage
The Language of the Rebuffed
Abstract
After official policy advice to governments is publicly released, governments are often accused of ignoring or rejecting their experts. Commonly represented as politicisation, this depiction is superficial. Digging deeper, is there something about the official advice itself that makes it easy to ignore? Instead of lamenting a demise of expertise, Christiane Gerblinger asks: does the expert advice of policy officials feature characteristics that invite its government audience to overlook or misread it? To answer this question, Gerblinger critically examines official policy advice and finds the language of the rebuffed: government experts reluctant to disclose what they know so as to accommodate political circumstances. She argues that this language evades stable meaning and diminishes the democratic right of citizens to scrutinise the work of government.
Keywords
policy; evidence; expertise; Communication; knowledge constructionDOI
10.22459/HGESS.2022ISBN
9781760465421, 9781760465414, 9781760465421Publisher
ANU PressPublisher website
https://press.anu.edu.au/Publication date and place
Canberra, 2022Imprint
ANU PressClassification
Communication studies
Public administration
Central / national / federal government policies