ScholarGate
助手
Process / pipelineProgram evaluation methodology

Realist Evaluation

Realist evaluation is a theory-driven approach to evaluating programs and policies that asks not simply 'does it work?' but 'what works, for whom, in what circumstances, and why?'. Developed by Ray Pawson and Nick Tilley in their 1997 book Realistic Evaluation, it treats interventions as theories incarnate: programs offer resources or opportunities that trigger underlying mechanisms of reasoning and response in participants, and those mechanisms only fire in particular contexts. The unit of analysis is the Context-Mechanism-Outcome (CMO) configuration, and the goal is to build and refine middle-range theory that explains differential outcomes across settings.

在 MethodMind 中打开即将推出应用、比较、获取指导
工具与资源
下载幻灯片
学习与探索
视频即将推出

阅读完整方法

仅限会员

使用免费账户登录即可阅读本节。

登录

方法图谱

相关方法的邻域——选择一个节点以展开探索。

另有 1 项

来源

  1. Pawson, R., & Tilley, N. (1997). Realistic Evaluation. London: SAGE Publications. ISBN: 9780761950097
  2. Pawson, R. (2006). Evidence-Based Policy: A Realist Perspective. London: SAGE Publications. ISBN: 9781412910606

如何引用本页

ScholarGate. (2026, June 22). Realist Evaluation of Programs and Policies. ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/zh/public-policy/realist-evaluation

选用哪种方法?

将本方法与其最相近的同类并置,并排研读——本馆将书籍铺陈于案上,取舍则由您定夺。

并排比较

被引用于

ScholarGateRealist Evaluation (Realist Evaluation of Programs and Policies). 于 2026-06-24 检索自 https://scholargate.app/zh/public-policy/realist-evaluation · 数据集: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20539026