Chris152":10ika902 said:
Peer review isn't an absolute that refers only to publication in professional journals - it takes place all the time in research, takes different forms and may have nothing to do with publication.
I must say that I too have never heard of it taking place outside professional journals.
But whether or not that is the case, peer review consists by definition of handing over what you have done or in the case in question what you have decided to do, to independent experts for their evaluation.
Now - and this is quite a serious point as opposed to point scoring - how much time do you think a government and its expert advisors - acting under the most high pressure conditions i.e. expected to select one course of action from a choice of many for immediate implementation - has for the luxury of handing over their plan to independent experts for their view, bearing in mind that they too by extension would also be under possibly even more pressure to come up with a view pretty damned quick?
What we have had on here (and I suppose that this is back to point scoring) is a bloke(s) who has heard the term "peer review" once, got a vague but incorrect idea of what it means and then tries to use the concept as a stick with which to beat the government.
This all seems to me to add up to reasons for evaluating the government's performance once the whole thing is done and dusted. We simply cannot come to a sensible conclusion at the moment. Mind you, if we have a political axe to grind, we were perfectly capable of coming to a 100% watertight conclusion before the problem even landed on the relevant desks in No 10.