| Course Description | In all societies, public policies are developed to solve social problems such as extremepoverty, inequality, basic sanitation, health and basic care, family planning, food
 security, mental health, abuse of illegal substances, education and protection of
 vulnerable groups. How can we ensure that these public policies are based on solid
 evidence, which would guarantee the greatest probability of effectiveness? And how do
 we plan and adapt the implementation of these policies to different realities, respecting
 cultural and historical differences?
 In order to achieve this, it is useful, if not necessary, to be acquainted with scientific
 thinking and the accumulation and use of evidence. It is also necessary to understand
 our own limitations and cognitive biases that interfere in the decision-making process,
 as well as understand the political and social context where decisions need to be made.
 This course aims to provide students with the tools necessary to assess public policies
 critically and rationally, as well as to evaluate different types of scientific evidence and
 understand how and where it is appropriate to include scientific evidence in building
 effective public policy.
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