The journal is primarily aimed at public, private and government sector policymakers, and articles must demonstrate both the empirical basis and the specific implications for policy and practice. The journal is dual-reviewed by a policy editor and an editor for the specific disciplinary field; they are then sent to outside referees, and, if accepted, professionally edited to ensure accessibility to scientists, lay readers and policy makers[7]
The journal publishes in the disciplinary domains of behavioral economics, cognitive and brain science, organizational science, social psychology, political science, decision marketing and management sciences, and sociology.[8] Policy areas include financial decision making, education, technology and innovation, health, justice and ethics, management and labor and energy and environment.[9] The current senior policy editor is Carol Graham of the Brookings Institution.
The main journal accepts: proposals (≈2,500 words), reports (≈3,000 words), findings (≈4,000) and reviews (≈5,000 words).[7] It also publishes invitations, or requests from policymakers for contributions from behavioral scientists on a particular policy issue [7][10]