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Exploring cultures of evidence in energy policymaking in the UK, Germany, and the Netherlands Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2024-11-19 Will McDowall
This paper explores different “cultures of evidence” in energy policymaking in the UK, Germany, and the Netherlands. The urgent energy system transformation needed to respond to the climate crisis depends on policies informed by technical and engineering expertise, and particularly energy modeling. Such expertise had traditionally been poorly represented in the energy ministries of the Dutch, German
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Variation in evidence use across policy sectors: the case of Brazil Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2024-11-14 Kidjie Saguin, João V Guedes-Neto, Pedro Lucas Moura Palotti, Natália Massaco Koga, Flavio Lyrio Carneiro
Evidence use across policy sectors is widely believed to vary as each sector espouses a specific and dominant pattern in how it sources evidence. This view privileges the idea that a “culture of evidence” serves as a norm that guides behavior in the entire sector. In this article, we seek to nuance the policy sectoral approach to understanding evidence use by analyzing the results of a large-N survey
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A world of evidence: the global spread and silent politics of evidence cultures Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2024-10-18 Holger Straßheim
How can we explain the worldwide spread of evidence-based policymaking despite continuous criticism? What are the underlying mechanisms of its persistence on a global scale? This article aims at answering these questions by focusing on the cultural constellations in which evidence is imbued with political as well as epistemic authority. Evidence cultures are discursive and institutional forces (re-)producing
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Understanding policy integration through an integrative capacity framework Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2024-08-10 Joanna Vince, Maree Fudge, Liam Fullbrook, Marcus Haward
An important aspect of policy integration is the need for policymakers to establish integrative capacity. However, very few scholars who refer to this concept have explained what integrative capacity is and what aspects of the policy process policymakers need to focus on to establish that capacity. In this paper, we define integrative capacity and introduce an “integrative capacity framework” that
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Words not deeds: the weak culture of evidence in the Canadian policy style Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2024-08-09 Andrea Migone, Michael Howlett, Alexander Howlett
The Canadian policy style has been described as one of overpromising and underdelivering, where heightened expectations are often met by underwhelming outcomes. Here, we examine the evidentiary style of Canadian policy-making which undergirds and reflects this policy style, particularly the nature of the policy advisory system that contributes to this pattern of policy-making. We do so by assessing
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Understanding street-level managers’ compliance: a comparative study of policy implementation in Switzerland, Italy, Germany, and Israel Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2024-07-02 Jörn Ege, Anat Gofen, Susanne Hadorn, Inbal Hakman, Anna Malandrino, Leroy Ramseier, Fritz Sager
This study focuses on street-level managers’ (SLMs) compliance with COVID-19 measures in Switzerland, Germany, Italy, and Israel, in order to better understand their role during policy implementation. Responsible for the direct delivery of public services, street-level organizations serve as the operational arm of the state in general and as the frontline of government policy in times of crisis. SLMs
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Governance fix? Power and politics in controversies about governing generative AI Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2024-07-02 Inga Ulnicane
The launch of ChatGPT in late 2022 led to major controversies about the governance of generative artificial intelligence (AI). This article examines the first international governance and policy initiatives dedicated specifically to generative AI: the G7 Hiroshima process, the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development reports, and the UK AI Safety Summit. This analysis is informed by policy
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Meeting expectations? Response of policy innovation labs to sustainable development goals Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2024-07-02 Esti Hoss-Golan, Anat Gofen, Adam M Wellstead
Introduced by the United Nations, Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) aim at facilitating inclusive sustainable development. Responsiveness to SDGs is considered a key to addressing pressing development problems. The current literature focuses on the responsiveness of varied public organizations to SDGs, whereas SDGs’ responsiveness of policy innovation labs (PILs) is understudied. Aiming to address
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How “baked in” ideas hinder ideational robustness: the International Monetary Fund and “fiscal space” Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2024-06-27 Ben Clift
This paper brings insights into ideational robustness to bear on the International Monetary Fund (IMF) fiscal policy thinking. It advances understanding of both the IMF and the concept of ideational robustness by focusing on economic ideas as they are put into practice by expert economic institutions. The IMF has traditionally enjoyed a reputation as a hawkish enforcer of neoliberal doctrine and conservative
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Policy design for biodiversity: How problem conception drift undermines “fit-for-purpose” Peatland conservation Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2024-06-14 Benjamin Cashore, Ishani Mukherjee, Altaf Virani, Lahiru S Wijedasa
For over two decades, scientists have documented the alarming decline of global Peatland ecosystems, regarded as the planet’s most crucial carbon sinks. The deterioration of these unique wetlands alongside their policy attention presents a puzzle for policy scientists and for students of anticipatory policy design. Two contrasting explanations have emerged. Some argue that pressures from economic globalization
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When code isn’t law: rethinking regulation for artificial intelligence Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2024-05-29 Brian Judge, Mark Nitzberg, Stuart Russell
This article examines the challenges of regulating artificial intelligence (AI) systems and proposes an adapted model of regulation suitable for AI’s novel features. Unlike past technologies, AI systems built using techniques like deep learning cannot be directly analyzed, specified, or audited against regulations. Their behavior emerges unpredictably from training rather than intentional design. However
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Ideational robustness in turbulent times Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2024-05-22 Martin B Carstensen, Eva Sørensen, Jacob Torfing
The concept of robustness has received increasing scholarly attention regarding public policy and governance, where it has enhanced our understanding of how policies and governance are adapted and innovated in response to disruptive events, challenges, and demands associated with heightened societal turbulence. Yet, we know little about the robustness of the ideas undergirding the efforts to foster
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Comparing evidence use in parliaments: the interplay of beliefs, traditions, and practices in the UK and Germany Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2024-05-21 Marc Geddes
This article draws on rich qualitative data from two national parliaments—the UK House of Commons and the German Bundestag—to examine knowledge practices in political institutions. This is an important topic, not only because parliaments play a significant role in democratic decision-making, but because it sheds light on debates about how such decision-making is based on and interacts with knowledge
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Advancing collaborative social outcomes through place-based solutions—aligning policy and funding systems Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2024-05-21 Lutfun Nahar Lata, Tim Reddel, Brian W Head, Luke Craven
More collaborative and human-centered approaches to tackle social problems of entrenched disadvantage have been introduced in many countries, including Australia, but with mixed results. Traditional programs that reinforce existing political and bureaucratic processes have been seen as blockers to collaborative modes of policymaking, governance, and delivery. Drawing on collaborative governance perspectives
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How framing strategies foster robust policy ideas Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2024-05-07 Daniel Béland, Robert Henry Cox
In this contribution, we identify how the framing strategies employed by policy and political actors make policy ideas robust. We examine the policy ideas of solidarity and sustainability to show how framing strategies that took advantages of the valence and polysemy of both ideas shaped them into robust policy ideas. Both ideas began as wide-ranging concepts designed to build coalitions in debates
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Framing contestation and public influence on policymakers: evidence from US artificial intelligence policy discourse Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2024-04-11 Daniel S Schiff
As artificial intelligence (AI) policy has begun to take shape in recent years, policy actors have worked to influence policymakers by strategically promoting issue frames that define the problems and solutions policymakers should attend to. Three such issue frames are especially prominent, surrounding AI’s economic, geopolitical, and ethical dimensions. Relatedly, while technology policy is traditionally
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Ideational robustness of economic ideas in action: the case of European Union economic governance through a decade of crisis Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2024-03-27 Martin B Carstensen, Vivien A Schmidt
Is it possible to develop a robust crisis management response in a system where governance is characterized by coercive power and adversarial bargaining rather than the diversity, inclusion, and openness highlighted by extant scholarship as conducive factors for robustness? Using two instances of crisis in the European Union—the Eurozone crisis (2010‒2015) and COVID-19 pandemic (2020‒2022)—the paper
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Activation policy: bruised and battered but still standing Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2024-03-27 Niklas A Andersen, Flemming Larsen
Policies aimed at upskilling, motivating and/or disciplining the unemployed have remained a cornerstone of most OECD countries’ employment policies since the 1990s. Central to these policies is the idea of activation – i.e. the premise that benefit entitlement is conditional on one’s participation in some kind of activity. This article seek to understand how this idea of activation has proven so enduring
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Why and how is the power of Big Tech increasing in the policy process? The case of generative AI Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2024-03-27 Shaleen Khanal, Hongzhou Zhang, Araz Taeihagh
The growing digitalization of our society has led to a meteoric rise of large technology companies (Big Tech), which have amassed tremendous wealth and influence through their ownership of digital infrastructure and platforms. The recent launch of ChatGPT and the rapid popularization of generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) act as a focusing event to further accelerate the concentration of power
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The ideational robustness of liberal democracy in the wake of the pandemic: comparing the Danish and Swedish cases Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2024-03-25 Åsa Knaggård, Peter Triantafillou
The Covid-19 pandemic sparked unprecedented political responses dramatically affecting societies, markets, and the lives of individuals. Under great uncertainty and turbulent conditions, governments adopted far-reaching political interventions to curb the pandemic. These interventions might therefore be expected to challenge key ideas underpinning liberal democracy. We analyze and compare how the political
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Exploring the role of uncertainty, emotions, and scientific discourse during the COVID-19 pandemic Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2024-03-22 Antoine Lemor, Éric Montpetit
This article examines the interplay between uncertainty, emotions, and scientific discourse in shaping COVID-19 policies in Quebec, Canada. Through the application of natural language processing (NLP) techniques, indices were developped to measure sentiments of uncertainty among policymakers, their negative sentiments, and the prevalence of scientific statements. The study reveals that while sentiments
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The World Health Organization as an engine of ideational robustness Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2024-03-06 Jean-Louis Denis, Gaëlle Foucault, Pierre Larouche, Catherine Régis, Miriam Cohen, Marie-Andrée Girard
The paper focuses on the role of the World Health Organization (WHO) in promoting a healthy world population as a generative and robust idea within health policy. The WHO’s health credo transcends national boundaries to promote health globally. It is embedded in norms, values, and standards promulgated by the organization and contributes in shaping the health responses of national governments. Ideational
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NGOs and Global Business Regulation of Transnational Alcohol and Ultra-Processed Food Industries Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2024-02-20 Rob Ralston, Belinda Townsend, Liz Arnanz, Fran Baum, Katherine Cullerton, Rodney Holmes, Jane Martin, Jeff Collin, Sharon Friel
The intensification of efforts by state and nonstate actors to address issues affecting global health has produced a patchwork of transnational regulatory governance. Within this field, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) are expected to perform authoritative roles in holding business actors to account and enhance the democratic legitimacy of institutions via their participation in governance processes
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Good models borrow, great models steal: intellectual property rights and generative AI Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2024-02-12 Simon Chesterman
Two critical policy questions will determine the impact of generative artificial intelligence (AI) on the knowledge economy and the creative sector. The first concerns how we think about the training of such models—in particular, whether the creators or owners of the data that are “scraped” (lawfully or unlawfully, with or without permission) should be compensated for that use. The second question
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Actors, alterations, and authorities: three observations of global policy and its transnational administration Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2024-02-01 Kim Moloney, Tim Legrand
This Special Issue and its seven contributions seek to shift the gaze of public policy scholarship toward the authorities, legitimacies, and influences of transnational actors on the creation and implementation of global policy and its transnational administration. It is, in large part, both a demonstration of the analytical and explanatory value of accounting for the influence of non-state actors
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Policy dissidents: Understanding girl activism as creating “Tactical Crevices” Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2024-02-01 Shenila Khoja-Moolji, Mary Ann Chacko
Global policymaking often seeks to create processes for the effective delivery of public goods and services. What happens when individuals critique or dissent such policies? In this paper, we examine the case of two activists—Greta Thunberg and Disha Ravi—who have been mobilizing attention toward climate change since their teenage years, and who have been both celebrated and vilified for it. While
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The rising authority and agency of public–private partnerships in global health governance Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2024-01-21 Antoine de Bengy Puyvallée
Global public–private partnerships (PPPs) have become prominent in efforts to address global challenges, particularly in the health field. In the scholarly literature, global PPPs have been conceptualized as arenas for voluntary public–private cooperation rather than agents of global governance. This paper challenges this approach, arguing that a sub-class of highly institutionalized partnerships have
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Policy sequencing can increase public support for ambitious climate policy Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2023-12-07 Simon Montfort, Lukas Fesenfeld, Isabelle Stadelmann-Steffen, Karin Ingold
Public support for ambitious climate policies and carbon prices that have direct costs for voters may depend on policy sequencing. Policy sequencing theory suggests that the strategic ordering of policies into sequences that initially create benefits can subsequently increase support for higher carbon prices. However, systematic quantitative evidence about the effects of sequencing on public support
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Blame avoidance and credit-claiming dynamics in government policy communications: evidence from leadership tweets in four OECD countries during the 2020–2022 COVID-19 pandemic Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2023-11-28 Ching Leong, Michael Howlett, Mehrdad Safaei
Government information activities are often thought to be motivated by a classic calculus of blame minimization and credit maximization. However, the precise interactions of “blame” and “credit” communication activities in government are not well understood, and questions abound about how they are deployed in practice. This paper uses Natural Language Processing (NLP) machine-learning sentiment analysis
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“State captured” policy advice? Think tanks as expert advisors in the Western Balkans Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2023-09-07 Irena Djordjevic, Diane Stone
Few scholars have dedicated their attention to the role of think tanks as policy experts within captured states. We investigate how, why, and to what extent think tanks are used in the captured states in the Western Balkans. Our assumption was that think tanks could become party to the processes of “capture”. However, original findings from focus group and interviews with think tankers show that think
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Expert knowledge for global pandemic policy: a chorus of evidence or a clutter of global commissions? Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2023-09-01 Diane Stone, Anneke Schmider
“Global Commissions of Inquiry” have usually been associated with the multilateral initiatives of governments and international organizations. However, various styles of “global commission” have emerged over time. During the COVID-19 pandemic, global commissions have been a key aspect of the COVID-19 international policy landscape, quickly emerging, in 2020 and 2021, to corral knowledge and evidence
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Dealing with the challenges of legitimacy, values, and politics in policy advice Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2023-08-31 Giliberto Capano, Michael Howlett, Leslie A Pal, M Ramesh
Policy advice has been the subject of ongoing research in the policy sciences as it raises fundamental issues about what constitutes policy knowledge, expertise, and their effects on policymaking. This introduction reviews the existing literature on the subject and introduces the themes motivating the articles in the issue. It highlights the need to consider several key subjects in the topic in the
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Expert legitimacy and competing legitimation in Italian school reforms Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2023-08-31 Maria Tullia Galanti
In the face of the complexities of problem-solving , experts are gaining centrality in policymaking (Weiss, 1979). At the same time, they are increasingly challenged in their legitimacy, which is not only technical but also political. Challenges to the legitimacy of experts suggest that other types of legitimacy are important for policymaking. Issues of legitimacy are particularly important for sound
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When bargaining is and is not possible: the politics of bureaucratic expertise in the context of democratic backsliding Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2023-08-21 Natália Massaco Koga, Ana Paula Karruz, Pedro Lucas de Moura Palotti, Marcos Luiz Vieira Soares Filho, Bruno Gontyjo do Couto
In looking at the complex relationship between expertise and power in policymaking, what is amiss are studies on how the expertise exchange bargain between politicians and bureaucracy works in practice, especially in antidemocratic contexts. To deal with this limitation, we use Christensen’s (Christensen, J. (2022). When bureaucratic expertise comes under attack. Public Administration) expertise bargain
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Citizensourcing policy advisory systems in a turbulent era Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2023-08-17 M. Jae Moon, Seulgi Lee, Seunggyu Park
Extending previous works on major changes in policy advisory systems (PASs), such as externalization (locus) and politicization (government control), this study examines whether and how democratization (citizensourcing) of PASs works based on the case of the Kwanghwamun Citizensourcing Policy Platform, which operated for 4 years under the Moon Jae-in administration in South Korea. Analyzing more than
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“I do not consent”: political legitimacy, misinformation, and the compliance challenge in Australia’s Covid-19 policy response Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2023-08-11 Melissa-Ellen Dowling, Tim Legrand
This paper examines the relationship between policy compliance, the emergence of alternate epistemes and authorities in online spaces, and the decline of trust and legitimacy in democratic institutions. Drawing on insights from public policy, regulation theory, and political theory, the paper critically engages with scholarship on “policy-takers” to illuminate the tensions of compliance and legitimacy
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Assessing the crisis management of the COVID-19 pandemic: a study of inquiry commission reports in Norway and Sweden Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2023-08-08 Tom Christensen, Per Lægreid
This article examines the inquiry reports from the commissions charged with investigating government crisis management of the COVID-19 pandemic in Norway and Sweden. Such postcrises commissions have been a common feature in many countries as they seek to systematize their experiences and learn from the crisis. In this article, we used various dimensions of governance capacity and governance legitimacy
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Pragmatism, partnerships, and persuasion: theorizing philanthropic foundations in the global policy agora Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2023-08-03 Janis Petzinger, Tobias Jung, Kevin Orr
Foundations are one of the oldest organizational forms globally; their number and resources, as well as their socio-political and economic importance, have steadily continued to grow. Yet, foundations’ attributes, activities, and actual achievements remain underexplored and poorly understood. This is particularly noticeable in the context of global policy and transnational administration, an area where
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Exclusion by design: a case study of an Indian urban housing subsidy scheme Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2023-07-25 Manav Khaire
The Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana (Urban)—Housing for All mission (PMAY-U), a flagship mission of the Government of India, aims to address the need for affordable housing in urban areas through five different schemes. One of these schemes is a housing subsidy scheme, the Credit Linked Subsidy Scheme (CLSS), which has significantly contributed to the success of PMAY-U. However, the design of the CLSS scheme
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The vicious circle of policy advisory systems and knowledge regimes in consolidated authoritarian regimes Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2023-06-30 Caner Bakir
So far, interest in policy and political sciences has mostly centered around the varieties of policy advisory systems (PASs) and knowledge regimes in consolidated democracies rather than in consolidated autocracies, which largely remain as black boxes. Drawing on a hybrid literature review, this article aims to fill this gap. It reviews selected articles published between 1992 and February 2023 in
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Speaking good to power: repositioning global policy advice through normative framing Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2023-06-24 Leslie A Pal
The delegitimization of policy advice has generated a defensive response that combines an assertion of the superior scientific character of expertise with a forthright affirmation of social and political values. This more value-driven discourse of policy expertise is examined with the case study of the Global Solutions Summit/World Policy Forum, launched in 2017 to support the Think20 network of global
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The politics of COVID-19 experts: comparing winners and losers in Italy and the UK Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2023-06-19 Paul Cairney, Federico Toth
This article analyzes the “politics of experts”—or the struggle between scientific advisers to gain visibility and influence—in the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic in Italy and the UK. Modifying classic studies of policy communities of interest groups and civil servants, we classify relevant policy experts in the two countries into the following categories: “core insiders,” “specialist insiders
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How welfare wins: Discursive institutionalism, the politics of the poor, and the expansion of social welfare in India during the early 21st century Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2023-06-16 Indrajit Roy
The worldwide explosion of social welfare has been described as the “quiet revolution” of our time. This paper analyses the expansion of social welfare in India during the early part of the 2000s. What explains this expansion of encompassing social welfare in India, following a history of disparate and fragmented social policies? The answer, I argue, lies in recognizing the importance of the “politics
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Assessing public support for social policy in times of crisis: evidence from the Child Tax Credit during the COVID-19 era in the United States Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2023-05-20 Mariely López-Santana, Lucas Núñez, Daniel Béland
The 2021 American Rescue Plan included the temporary expansion of the Child Tax Credit (CTC)—the largest individual income tax credit program in the United States—for most families with children. In the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, how did the public perceive this social policy benefit for families, especially in relation to other traditional social programs? By focusing on the CTC, an understudied
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Discourses of growth in megaproject-based urban development: a comparative study of Poland and Finland Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2023-05-17 Magdalena Rek-Woźniak
The paper aims to add to the debate on the varieties of neoliberalism and the homogenizing effects of megaproject-based urban development. It examines the acculturation of the growth imperative as the master discourse that supports the development and implementation of two projects aimed at transforming the centers of Tampere, Finland, and Łódź, Poland. The selected cities shared similar traits as
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Bridging the “consent gap”: mechanisms of legitimization in a cross-border megaproject Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2023-05-08 Silvia Lucciarini, Rossana Galdini
In the recent debate on megaprojects (MPs), greater attention is devoted to the functioning of the interorganizational and multiactor networks that are one of the most innovative features in recent years. The complexity of these structures brings out governability issues for an MP’s management. Mutual recognition and consent become elements capable of inaugurating more collaborative processes and practices
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Comparisons as a discursive tool: shaping megaproject narratives in the United Kingdom Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2023-04-26 Natalya Sergeeva, Johan Ninan
The mobilization of narratives is essential in integrating people and constructing identities that help in navigating complexity, uncertainty, and conflictuality. This paper explores how comparisons are used as a discursive tool to shape narratives and bring about changes in policy and society, using the High Speed Two megaproject in the UK as a case study. We examine the comparisons that promoters
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The development of large public infrastructure projects: integrating policy and project studies models Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2023-04-24 Pierre-André Hudon, Serghei Floricel
Project management theory often reduces development to a simplistic and smooth process of consultation leading to a consensual set of requirements. However, in large public infrastructure projects, this is rarely the case as development is often subject to major power struggles. This article shows that public policy theory has an excellent potential to shed a fresh light on project development. An
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Nonuse and hypocritical use of strategic narratives in Megaprojects: The case of the Florence high-speed railway Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2023-04-18 Fabrizio Coticchia, Marco Di Giulio
Since megaprojects are costly, impactful, and often contentious policymaking processes, scholars have started to look at policy narratives as instruments that actors use strategically to justify their preferences and achieve their goals. But is this really the case? Do actors always adopt a narrative to support their goals? Do they develop arguments that are consistent with their official goals and
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“Scales of justice. Large dams and water rights in the Tigris–Euphrates basin” Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2023-02-20 Alessandro Tinti
The paper explores the politics of scale associated with the top-down planning of large hydraulic infrastructures in the Tigris–Euphrates basin. Against the backdrop of a worsening water crisis and the lack of cooperation between riparian countries, dams and reservoirs across the transboundary river system are sites of contestation between competing claims over dwindling and disputed resources. Drawing
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The politics of military megaprojects: discursive struggles in Canadian and Australian naval shipbuilding strategies Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2023-02-04 Andrea Migone, Alexander Howlett, Michael Howlett
Large-scale military platform procurement is an essential but understudied component of the policy studies of megaprojects. Procurement decisions in this area, from ships to aircraft, are examples of a specific type of often very expensive purchases which feature complex multi-actor and multiyear processes characterized by high degrees of conflict between actors over purchases and planning horizons
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Participatory governance in megaprojects: the Lyon–Turin high-speed railway among structure, agency, and democratic participation Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2023-01-31 Giovanni Esposito, Andrea Felicetti, Andrea Terlizzi
Megaprojects are increasingly common across countries and attract substantial political attention from a variety of actors. Recent studies have highlighted the need to move from an understanding of megaprojects as linear and rational processes towards a more nuanced approach that accounts for non-linear and conflictual aspects. Participatory governance is often proposed as a valuable resource in this
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Critical policy capacity factors in the implementation of the community health worker program in India Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2023-01-19 Bijoya Roy, Fabiana da Cunha Saddi, Stephen Peckham, Maria Pereira Barretos
This paper employs the policy capacity framework to develop a multidimensional and nested policy analysis that is able to examine how different types of capacity—analytical, organizational, and political from different related levels of the health system—have contributed to both policy success and failure during the implementation of a politically significant national community health worker (CHW)
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Political legitimacy and vaccine hesitancy: Disability support workers in Australia Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2023-01-10 Helen Dickinson, Anne Kavanagh, Stefanie Dimov, Marissa Shields, Ashley McAllister
People with disability are an at-risk group in the COVID-19 pandemic for a range of clinical and socioeconomic reasons. In recognition of this, Australians with disability and those who work with them were prioritized in access to vaccination, but the vaccination targets were not met. In this paper, we analyze qualitative data generated from a survey with 368 disability support workers to identify
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Analytical capacity as a critical condition for responding to COVID-19 in Brazil Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2022-12-23 Natália Massaco Koga, Pedro Lucas de Moura Palotti, Pedro Arthur de Miranda Marques Pontes, Bruno Gontyjo do Couto, Marcos Luiz Vieira Soares
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic posed several challenges to the Brazilian health system, among them the general context of ambiguity and uncertainty and the conflicting positioning of the government in power concerning scientific advice resources. Different aspects can be analyzed to explore the dynamics of strengthening and resilience of the system. This paper focuses on its analytical
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Remaking the Sustainable Development Goals: relational Indigenous epistemologies Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2022-07-28 Johannes M Waldmüller, Mandy Yap, Krushil Watene
While the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) were inclusive in their design, the reliance on official measurement infrastructures has upheld narrow definitions of both the terms of sustainability and development. Indigenous and non-Indigenous “governance beyond the state” approaches call these definitions into question. They highlight that disaggregated official data are unable to fully reflect alternative
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When indicators fail: SPAR, the invisible measure of pandemic preparedness Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2022-07-18 Sakiko Fukuda-Parr
Recent literature on indicators as technology of global governance has shown the power of numbers in shaping knowledge and policy priorities. But not all indicators have powerful effects; some remain invisible. Are such indicators an obverse of powerful indicators? Are the same process of indirect exercise of power to indirectly achieve social and economic effects at work? This paper explores the case
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Statistical capacity development and the production of epistemic infrastructures Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2022-07-14 Marlee Tichenor
Designating statistical capacity development as a target for measurement in the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) created a dilemma for statistical decision-makers in the United Nations system, as some saw the inclusion of statistical capacity in SDG17 as a “conflict of interest,” making their work both a goal of the SDGs and a means to achieve them. In 2022, there are five indicators for measuring
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Governance and societal impact of blockchain-based self-sovereign identities Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2022-06-13 Rachel Benchaya Gans, Jolien Ubacht, Marijn Janssen
Traditionally, governments and companies store data to identify persons for services provision and interactions. The rise of self-sovereign identities (SSIs) based on blockchain technologies provides individuals with ownership and control over their personal data and allows them to share their data with others using a sort of “digital safe.” Fundamentally, people have the sole ownership of their identity
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COVID-19, crisis responses, and public policies: from the persistence of inequalities to the importance of policy design Policy and Society (IF 5.7) Pub Date : 2022-05-18 Daniel Béland, Alex Jingwei He, M Ramesh
The coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic has once again highlighted the importance of social inequalities during major crises, a reality that has clear implications for public policy. In this introductory article to the thematic issue of Policy and Society on COVID-19, inequalities, and public policies, we provide an overview of the nexus between crisis and inequality before exploring its importance for