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Science, Policy & Pandemics: Perspectives on Easing Lockdown Restrictions
Finding a new "normal" after lockdown is fraught with uncertainty. In the thirteenth episode of our podcast series on science, policy & pandemics, we're sharing the perspectives of an engineer, an economist, and a policy advisor on easing the lockdown.
16 June 2020
Privacy Enhancing Technologies
As part of CSaP's 2020 virtual annual conference, policymakers and academics gathered in early June for a discussion which explored how differential privacy might be applied, the value of governed and secure data, online harms, and where privacy enhancing technologies fit within the aims of the National Data Privacy Strategy.
15 June 2020
Science, Policy & Pandemics: Our Current Understanding of Covid-19
What have we learned about the epidemiology of covid-19 since the onset of the UK’s lockdown? In the twelfth episode of our series on Science, Policy and Pandemics, our host Dr Rob Doubleday was joined by disease dynamic experts to discuss what we know now about the dynamics of covid-19 that we didn't know twelve weeks ago.
15 June 2020
How can we get to net zero?
As part of our annual conference virtual seminar on getting to net zero, we explored the structural changes needed to get to net zero.
9 June 2020
Science, Policy & Pandemics: Building Trust Between Politicians and Scientific Advisers
As part of our podcast series on Science, Policy & Pandemics, Dr Rob Doubleday and Salma Shah explored how the relationship between scientists and policymakers works in practice. With guests Lord Alistair Darling and Professor Frank Kelly, they discussed how ministers and their scientific advisers can build relationships based on trust, and how the nature of decisions, the personalities of the people involved, and the wider political context can shape those vital relationships.
5 June 2020
Applying systems thinking to policymaking
The challenges facing government tend to be mutlifacted, complex, chronic, social, economic and environmental, and their causes and potential solutions are typically unobvious, suggests Paul Kett, Director General at the Department for Education. As part of CSaP's 2020 Annual Virtual Conference, we explored how systems thinking can help government seek solutions to wicked problems.
29 May 2020
Science, Policy & Pandemics: The Principles and Practice of Decision Making in Government
As part of our series on Science, Policy and Pandemics, we explored the principles and practice of decision making in government during health emergencies, using the UK's response to Ebola, Novichok, and childhood obesity as case studies.
29 May 2020
Finding a Place for Citizen Science in Policymaking
As part of our 2020 Virtual Annual Conference, we asked: how does citizen science help us think about science not merely as a matter of applying expert knowledge within policy, but rather as a different set of ways of developing understanding and mobilizing science through broader processes of engagement and inquiry?
22 May 2020
Food for Thought
In the first session of CSaP's 2020 annual virtual conference, panelists from the civil service and academia explored food, food policy and different ways of understanding the food system.
22 May 2020
Science, Policy & Pandemics: The State of Food Security During the Covid-19 Crisis
As part of our series on Science, Policy and Pandemics, we explored food insecurity, the public policies to support food provision to those who are shielding, and supply chain resilience in the context of the covid-19 pandemic.