Ritter Alison, Livingston Michael, Chalmers Jenny, Berends Lynda, Reuter Peter
Drug Policy Modelling Program, National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre, UNSW, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia.
Centre for Alcohol Policy Research (CAPR), Department of Public Health, School of Psychology and Public Health, La Trobe University, Melbourne, VIC 3000, Australia.
Int J Drug Policy. 2016 May;31:39-50. doi: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2016.02.004. Epub 2016 Feb 8.
A central policy research question concerns the extent to which specific policies produce certain effects - and cross-national (or between state/province) comparisons appear to be an ideal way to answer such a question. This paper explores the current state of comparative policy analysis (CPA) with respect to alcohol and drugs policies.
We created a database of journal articles published between 2010 and 2014 as the body of CPA work for analysis. We used this database of 57 articles to clarify, extract and analyse the ways in which CPA has been defined. Quantitative and qualitative analysis of the CPA methods employed, the policy areas that have been studied, and differences between alcohol CPA and drug CPA are explored.
There is a lack of clear definition as to what counts as a CPA. The two criteria for a CPA (explicit study of a policy, and comparison across two or more geographic locations), exclude descriptive epidemiology and single state comparisons. With the strict definition, most CPAs were with reference to alcohol (42%), although the most common policy to be analysed was medical cannabis (23%). The vast majority of papers undertook quantitative data analysis, with a variety of advanced statistical methods. We identified five approaches to the policy specification: classification or categorical coding of policy as present or absent; the use of an index; implied policy differences; described policy difference and data-driven policy coding. Each of these has limitations, but perhaps the most common limitation was the inability for the method to account for the differences between policy-as-stated versus policy-as-implemented.
There is significant diversity in CPA methods for analysis of alcohol and drugs policy, and some substantial challenges with the currently employed methods. The absence of clear boundaries to a definition of what counts as a 'comparative policy analysis' may account for the methodological plurality but also appears to stand in the way of advancing the techniques.
一个核心政策研究问题涉及特定政策在多大程度上产生特定效果——而跨国(或州/省之间)比较似乎是回答此类问题的理想方式。本文探讨了酒精和毒品政策方面比较政策分析(CPA)的现状。
我们创建了一个2010年至2014年发表的期刊文章数据库,作为CPA工作的分析主体。我们使用这个包含57篇文章的数据库来阐明、提取和分析CPA的定义方式。对所采用的CPA方法、所研究的政策领域以及酒精CPA和毒品CPA之间的差异进行了定量和定性分析。
对于什么算作CPA缺乏明确的定义。CPA的两个标准(对政策的明确研究以及两个或更多地理位置之间的比较)排除了描述性流行病学和单一州比较。按照严格定义,大多数CPA是关于酒精的(42%),尽管最常分析的政策是医用大麻(23%)。绝大多数论文进行了定量数据分析,采用了各种先进的统计方法。我们确定了五种政策规范方法:将政策存在或不存在进行分类或类别编码;使用指数;隐含的政策差异;描述的政策差异和数据驱动的政策编码。这些方法都有局限性,但也许最常见的局限性是该方法无法解释政策声明与政策实施之间的差异。
在分析酒精和毒品政策的CPA方法上存在显著差异,并且当前使用的方法存在一些重大挑战。对于什么算作“比较政策分析”缺乏明确的定义界限,这可能解释了方法的多样性,但似乎也阻碍了技术的进步。