Ronald Labonté
1*1 Canada Research Chair, Globalization and Health Equity, Faculty of Medicine, School of Epidemiology and Public Health, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
Abstract
This latest contribution by the evaluation research team at Flinders University/Southgate Institute on their multiyear
study of South Australia’s Health in All Policies (HiAP) initiative is simultaneously frustrating, exemplary,
and partial. It is frustrating because it does not yet reveal the extent to which the initiative achieved its stated
outcomes; that awaits further papers. It is exemplary in describing an evaluation research design in which the
research team has excelled over the years, and in adding to it an element of theory testing and re-testing. It is
partial, in that the political and economic context considered important in examining both process and outcome
of the HiAP initiative stops at the Australian state’s borders as if the macro-level national and global political
economy (and its power relations) have little or no bearing on the sustainability of the policy learning that the
initiative may have engendered. To ask that of an otherwise elegant study design that effectively engages policy
actors in its implementation may be demanding too much; but it may now be time that more critical political
economy theories join with those that elaborate well the more routine praxis of public policy-making.