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Policy Brief Guide

Excellent guide for academic or professional policy brief write-up, to minimise confusion and set a standard for those who want to learn to write a policy brief for whatever purpose

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xllntideas
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© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
100% found this document useful (1 vote)
466 views

Policy Brief Guide

Excellent guide for academic or professional policy brief write-up, to minimise confusion and set a standard for those who want to learn to write a policy brief for whatever purpose

Uploaded by

xllntideas
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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TITLE OF PAPER

− Place title of paper here and proceed

OVERVIEW OR EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

− A description of the problem addressed;


− A statement on why the current approach/policy option needs to be changed;
− Your recommendations for action.

CONTEXT AND IMPORTANCE OF THE PROBLEM

− A clear statement of the problem or issue in focus.


− A short overview of the root causes of the problem
− A clear statement of the policy implications of the problem which clearly
establishes the current importance and policy relevance of the issue.

CRITIQUE OF POLICY OPTION(S)

− A short overview of the policy option(s) in focus


− An argument illustrating why and how the current or proposed approach is
failing.

POLICY RECOMMENDATIONS

− A breakdown of the specific practical steps or measures that need to be


implemented
− Sometimes also includes a closing paragraph re-emphasising the importance of
action.

APPENDICES
− Although the brief is a short and targeted document, authors sometimes decide that
their argument needs further support and so include an appendix. Appendices
should be included only when absolutely necessary.

SOURCES CONSULTED
− Many writers of the policy brief decide not to include any sourcing of their evidence
as their focus is not on an academic audience. However, if you decide to include a
short bibliography then place it at the end. Many writers prefer to lead their readers to
further reading and so, include a recommended readings section. Not surprisingly,
many of the recommended readings are other related policy documents produced by
their organisations!

©AAkpoza 2010 policy brief guide source: http://www.policy.hu/ipf/fel-


pubs/samples/PolicyBrief-described.pdf

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