新黄金标准:随机对照试验与实验性发展的兴起

The New Gold Standard: The Rise of Randomized Control Trials and Experimental Development

Economic Geography · 2017
被引 59
人大 A-ABS 4

中文导读

追踪了随机对照试验(RCT)在世界银行和J-PAL两大发展机构中的兴起,发现其在各机构中呈现不同形式,并探讨了RCT如何重塑发展治理、引发新问题与空间。

Abstract

Development economics and institutions have a new gold standard: the randomized control trial (RCT). An RCT is an evaluation technique that draws from experimental design in order to measure the impact of a development project. Due to randomization—randomly distributing people or communities to receive either control or treatment—advocates suggest that it is possible to measure the impact of an intervention, and attribute a causal relationship between the intervention and its outcome. As such, proponents claim that RCTs are able to get to the heart of what really works for development interventions. This article charts the rise of RCTs within two major development institutions: the World Bank and the Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab (J-PAL) at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Drawing from fieldwork at these two institutions, we follow RCTs as a technology of development, finding that they take divergent forms at each of the institutions. The article examines the contested and uneven paths of RCTs as they have proliferated throughout development economics scholarship and practice, and teases out the new problems, subjects, spaces, and governance regimes of development that RCTs engender. We build on existing economic geography research concerned with the rise of behavioralism within development. By centering the methodology of RCTs, we find institutional and geographic variation as well as a reconfiguration of development governance through experimentation.

随机对照试验发展经济学世界银行J-PAL发展治理