What is it about?
Academic freedom is imperative to evidence-based public policy. Yet the mechanisms by which donor influence, political governance, and control of data infrastructure reshape what counts as ‘evidence’ remain underexplored. This essay draws distinctions between documented interventions (e.g. contractual leverage over hiring or publication) and incentive-driven distortions (e.g. agenda-setting and selective visibility), and treats evidence production as an end-to-end pipeline, from agenda-setting and data access to dissemination and correction. We explore the intentional production or maintenance of contestable facts that keep consequential claims arguable rather than testable. We illustrate the framework with criminal justice, a stress test domain where coercive state power, constitutional constraints, and life-or-death consequences heighten incentives to manage evidence. The essay concludes with a research agenda and safeguards that generalize across policy areas while accounting for the legal and ethical constraints of criminal justice data.
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This page is a summary of: Academic freedom, manufactured evidence, and the integrity of criminal justice policy, January 2026, PubPub,
DOI: 10.21428/cb6ab371.70dfc949.
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