“…In these experiences in the field, I confirmed in practice what many analyses of evidence and policymaking have suggested in print. Information is more likely to become evidence by being accepted into the making of advice and policy if its content and purveyors fit with pre-existing bureaucratic and cognitive structures and interests (Ailsa et al, 2011;Cairney, 2016;Décieux, 2020;Kelly, 2018;Lancaster, Seear, Treloar, & Ritter, 2017;MacGregor, 2017;Masood et al, 2020;Monaghan, 2011;Monaghan et al, 2018;Nutley, Boaz, Davies, & Fraser, 2019;Oliver & de Vocht, 2015;Ritter & Bammer, 2010;Roberts, Petticrew, Liabo, & Macintyre, 2012;Smith & Joyce, 2012;Stevens, 2007Stevens, , 2011c. This is not some random, natural or wholly unconscious process.…”