Nudging policymakers on gendered impacts of policy

Despite the proliferation of nudge research in the last few decades, very little published work aims to nudge the behavior of policymakers. Here we explore the impact of a well-established nudge on policymakers in the Northwest Territories of Canada. In a pre-registered randomized controlled trial,...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:PLOS ONE
Main Authors: Bochon, Lindsay Blair, Dean, Janet, Rosteck, Tanja, Zhao, Jiaying
Other Authors: Komatsu, Hidenori
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0293036
https://dx.plos.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0293036
Description
Summary:Despite the proliferation of nudge research in the last few decades, very little published work aims to nudge the behavior of policymakers. Here we explore the impact of a well-established nudge on policymakers in the Northwest Territories of Canada. In a pre-registered randomized controlled trial, we emailed an invitation to policymakers ( N = 263) to attend an online briefing on gendered impacts of policy. In the treatment condition ( N = 133), the invitation contained personal stories of two women whose lives were disproportionally impacted by public policies more than men. In the control condition ( N = 130), the invitation did not contain such stories. After the briefing, we sent all participants in both conditions a link to a public pledge that they could sign. The pledge was to lead and advocate for equity-oriented policymaking. Contrary to our prediction, there was a small backfiring effect where policymakers in the treatment condition (3.0%) were less likely to attend the briefing than the control condition (7.7%). However, two policymakers (1.5%) in the treatment condition signed the public pledge compared to one (0.8%) in the control condition. The current findings reveal the limits of using personal stories as a nudge to influence policymakers. We discuss insights gained from this experiment and follow-up debriefings with policymakers on how to improve future behavioral interventions designed to nudge policymakers.