Democracy Trial And Error
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on Monday, 23 November 2015 17:57 Democracy works through trial and error examples trial and error: Ghana president By Dasmani Laary Ghanaian President John Dramani Mahama says
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democracy is an integral part of development, whose principles African countries have to rehearse long enough to get maximum benefits and swiftly transform the trial and error method continent's fledgling economies.Speaking at the launch of the The Africa Report inaugural debates 2015 in Ghana's capital Accra, Mahama told guests, democracy ensured freedom, respect for human dignity, happiness, and provision of utilities, quality education and good health.However, he said the practice was not perfect anywhere in the world trial and error psychology and this should not lead to suggestions it was not working on the African continent.In democracy the citizens of a nation do more than decide who their leader is and their representatives will be"In fact, Africa has fought and fought, pushed and pulled to get to where it is today, I don't think we've been practising democracy long enough to say that it isn't working," Mahama said."Every country must do trial and error and allow its democracy to evolve into a system that is representative of that culture.Especially, if we're comparing ourselves to nations that have had democracies for centuries."Democracy will never be a perfect system because people will always be imperfect beings. The democracy of the US (United States) is not the same as the democracy of the UK (United Kingdom).Ghana has flirted with authoritarian, military, transitional civilian and liberal democratic phases s
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art of human rationality. Please visit our About page for more information. Trial and error in policy making 7 Post author: DavidAgain 15 June 2011 10:39AM http://lesswrong.com/lw/67y/trial_and_error_in_policy_making/ I’m working in government in the UK, and interested in rationality in policy making: at the individual level, but also how we can build systems (in terms of requirements during http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1842&dat=19561019&id=rgYsAAAAIBAJ&sjid=eMYEAAAAIBAJ&pg=3152,1916597 policy creation, creation of independent bodies, incentive structures for officials/ministers…) that encourage more rational policies. This is the context for the stuff below. I recently went to a trial and talk on the use of trial and error in policy making. It was hosted by the Institute for Government (a non-political think tank advising ministers and civil servants on good government), and included the Undercover Economist, Tim Harford. Details including a recording can be found here: http://www.instituteforgovernment.org.uk/our-events/105/government-by-trial-and-error-a-discussion-with-tim-harford Ben Goldacre was also attending in the audience, and has written about this: trial and error http://www.badscience.net/2011/05/we-should-so-blatantly-do-more-randomised-trials-on-policy/ The basic message of the talk was that much of policy could benefit from being trialled more effectively, whether in the form of formalised, controlled trials: following the medical example inasmuch as that is practically possible. This approach seems to be being seriously considered by this government in several areas: one example of how it might work in theory can be found here: http://www.straightstatistics.org/article/what-works-criminal-justice-time-find-out Of course, the reality is often messier, and ministers are looking for both swifter results and more security. Other forms of ‘experimentation’ involve devolving power to local councils (Localism Bill) or schools (Free Schools) etc. In these cases there aren’t the same formal comparison methods but you at least get lots of ideas and some ability to judge which ones have gone well. An underlying issue is the quality of assessments: a policy that has clear criteria for appraisal built into its design will be much easier to judge, whereas one that is simply acted upon and studied later might suffer from poor evidence and be more open to being inter