The wonderful folks at the OECD have released “LOGIC: Good Practice Principles for Mainstreaming Behavioural Public Policy“.
More from them:
“LOGIC: Good Practice Principles for Mainstreaming Behavioural Public Policy puts forward 14 good practice principles to encourage the incorporation of behavioural perspectives into policymaking. Whereas traditional policy analysis methods make assumptions about people and their behaviour which may not be true in practice, a behavioural lens equips policymakers with a more realistic understanding of how people interact with each other and institutions.
The report also includes global country examples of activities that governments are pursuing in support of these good practice principles, a set of questions to provide a starting point for analysis of behavioural science maturity levels, as well as comprehensive case studies of the behavioural science mainstreaming journeys of key jurisdictions from Argentina and Australia.
The principles were co-developed with members of the OECD Network of Behavioural Insights Experts in Government, are based on effective practices from policymakers and behavioural science experts, and are animated with data from multiple sources, including the Behavioural Insights Knowledge Hub and the Interactive BI Unit Map.”