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To provide opportunities or spaces for the public to debate issues of concern, explore solutions, and make decisions together…professional expertise is there to inform and help the public understand the issues more deeply…and appreciate why making decisions about these issues is often complex, and perhaps also why certain decisions that were made in the past did not have desired consequences. (p. 113)An evaluation ethos grounded in ideas of democratic professionalism and civic agency regards the production of evaluation knowledge as a “relational public craft,” as Boyte (2007, p. 83) describes it, rather than as a detached, objective, expert undertaking commonly promoted by many evaluators. Furthermore, neither the model of the professional as educator nor the professional as advocate defines the political role of the evaluator in this perspective.…”