Policy and Society
2021 - 2024
Current editor(s): Daniel Béland, Giliberto Capano, Michael Howlett and M. Ramesh From Darryl S. Jarvis and M. Ramesh Oxford University Press, Great Clarendon Street, Oxford OX2 6DP, UK. Bibliographic data for series maintained by Oxford University Press (). Access Statistics for this journal.
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Volume 43, issue 3, 2024
- Framing contestation and public influence on policymakers: evidence from US artificial intelligence policy discourse pp. 255-288
- Daniel S Schiff
- Exploring the role of uncertainty, emotions, and scientific discourse during the COVID-19 pandemic pp. 289-303
- Antoine Lemor and Éric Montpetit
- Advocacy coalitions as political organizations pp. 304-316
- Daniel Nohrstedt and Tim Heinmiller
- Understanding street-level managers’ compliance: a comparative study of policy implementation in Switzerland, Italy, Germany, and Israel pp. 317-333
- Jörn Ege, Anat Gofen, Susanne Hadorn, Inbal Hakman, Anna Malandrino, Leroy Ramseier and Fritz Sager
- Meeting expectations? Response of policy innovation labs to sustainable development goals pp. 334-350
- Esti Hoss-Golan, Anat Gofen and Adam M Wellstead
- Policy design for biodiversity: How problem conception drift undermines “fit-for-purpose” Peatland conservation pp. 351-380
- Benjamin Cashore, Ishani Mukherjee, Altaf Virani and Lahiru S Wijedasa
- Understanding policy integration through an integrative capacity framework pp. 381-395
- Joanna Vince, Maree Fudge, Liam Fullbrook and Marcus Haward
Volume 43, issue 2, 2024
- Ideational robustness in turbulent times pp. 111-126
- Martin B Carstensen, Eva Sørensen and Jacob Torfing
- Activation policy: bruised and battered but still standing pp. 127-140
- Niklas A Andersen and Flemming Larsen
- The ideational robustness of bureaucracy pp. 141-158
- Eva Sørensen and Jacob Torfing
- How “baked in” ideas hinder ideational robustness: the International Monetary Fund and “fiscal space” pp. 159-172
- Ben Clift
- Ideational robustness of economic ideas in action: the case of European Union economic governance through a decade of crisis pp. 173-188
- Martin B Carstensen and Vivien A Schmidt
- Paradigmatic stability, ideational robustness, and policy persistence: exploring the impact of policy ideas on policy-making pp. 189-203
- Andrea Migone, Michael Howlett and Alexander Howlett
- The World Health Organization as an engine of ideational robustness pp. 204-224
- Jean-Louis Denis, Gaëlle Foucault, Pierre Larouche, Catherine Régis, Miriam Cohen and Marie-Andrée Girard
- The ideational robustness of liberal democracy in the wake of the pandemic: comparing the Danish and Swedish cases pp. 225-239
- Åsa Knaggård and Peter Triantafill
- How framing strategies foster robust policy ideas pp. 240-253
- Daniel Béland and Robert Henry Cox
Volume 43, issue 1, 2024
- Actors, alterations, and authorities: three observations of global policy and its transnational administration pp. 1-10
- Kim Moloney and Tim Legrand
- Expert knowledge for global pandemic policy: a chorus of evidence or a clutter of global commissions? pp. 11-24
- Diane Stone and Anneke Schmider
- The rising authority and agency of public–private partnerships in global health governance pp. 25-40
- Antoine de Bengy
- Pragmatism, partnerships, and persuasion: theorizing philanthropic foundations in the global policy agora pp. 41-53
- Janis Petzinger, Tobias Jung and Kevin Orr
- NGOs and Global Business Regulation of Transnational Alcohol and Ultra-Processed Food Industries pp. 54-69
- Rob Ralston, Belinda Townsend, Liz Arnanz, Fran Baum, Katherine Cullerton, Rodney Holmes, Jane Martin, Jeff Collin and Sharon Friel
- Outsourcing authority in global policy: legitimating the anti-money laundering regime through professionalization pp. 70-82
- Eleni Tsingou
- Accountability enablers? The role of transnational activism in the use of the multilateral development bank grievance mechanisms pp. 83-97
- Eda Gunaydin and Susan Park
- Policy dissidents: Understanding girl activism as creating “Tactical Crevices” pp. 98-110
- Shenila Khoja-Moolji and Mary Ann Chacko
Volume 42, issue 3, 2023
- Dealing with the challenges of legitimacy, values, and politics in policy advice pp. 275-287
- Giliberto Capano, Michael Howlett, Leslie A Pal and M Ramesh
- Expert legitimacy and competing legitimation in Italian school reforms pp. 288-302
- Maria Tullia Galanti
- Citizensourcing policy advisory systems in a turbulent era pp. 303-318
- M. Jae Moon, Seulgi Lee and Seunggyu Park
- “I do not consent”: political legitimacy, misinformation, and the compliance challenge in Australia’s Covid-19 policy response pp. 319-333
- Melissa-Ellen Dowling and Tim Legrand
- “State captured” policy advice? Think tanks as expert advisors in the Western Balkans pp. 334-346
- Irena Djordjevic and Diane Stone
- Speaking good to power: repositioning global policy advice through normative framing pp. 347-358
- Leslie A Pal
- Spreading expertise: think tanks as digital advocators in the social media era pp. 359-377
- Jing Zhao and Xufeng Zhu
- When bargaining is and is not possible: the politics of bureaucratic expertise in the context of democratic backsliding pp. 378-391
- Natália Massaco Koga, Ana Paula Karruz, Pedro Lucas de Moura Palotti, Marcos Luiz Vieira Soares Filho and Bruno Gontyjo do Couto
- The politics of COVID-19 experts: comparing winners and losers in Italy and the UK pp. 392-405
- Paul Cairney and Federico Toth
- Knowledge–practice gap in healthcare payments: the role of policy capacity pp. 406-418
- Azad Singh Bali and M Ramesh
- The vicious circle of policy advisory systems and knowledge regimes in consolidated authoritarian regimes pp. 419-439
- Caner Bakir
Volume 42, issue 2, 2023
- Governing wickedness in megaprojects: discursive and institutional perspectives pp. 131-147
- Giovanni Esposito and Andrea Terlizzi
- The development of large public infrastructure projects: integrating policy and project studies models pp. 148-163
- Pierre-André Hudon and Serghei Floricel
- Nonuse and hypocritical use of strategic narratives in Megaprojects: the case of the Florence high-speed railway pp. 164-183
- Fabrizio Coticchia and Marco Di Giulio
- Scales of justice. Large dams and water rights in the Tigris–Euphrates basin pp. 184-196
- Alessandro Tinti
- Comparisons as a discursive tool: shaping megaproject narratives in the United Kingdom pp. 197-211
- Natalya Sergeeva and Johan Ninan
- Bridging the “consent gap”: mechanisms of legitimization in a cross-border megaproject pp. 212-225
- Silvia Lucciarini and Rossana Galdini
- The politics of military megaprojects: discursive struggles in Canadian and Australian naval shipbuilding strategies pp. 226-244
- Andrea Migone, Alexander Howlett and Michael Howlett
- Discourses of growth in megaproject-based urban development: a comparative study of Poland and Finland pp. 245-258
- Magdalena Rek-Woźniak
- Participatory governance in megaprojects: the Lyon–Turin high-speed railway among structure, agency, and democratic participation pp. 259-273
- Giovanni Esposito, Andrea Felicetti and Andrea Terlizzi
Volume 42, issue 1, 2023
- Employing the policy capacity framework for health system strengthening pp. 1-13
- Fabiana da Cunha Saddi, Stephen Peckham, Gerald Bloom, Nick Turnbull, Vera Schattan Coelho and Jean-Louis Denis
- Meeting the challenge of health system transformation in European countries pp. 14-27
- David J Hunter and Rafael Bengoa
- Building policy capacity for managing rapid, complex change in China’s health system pp. 28-48
- Lewis Husain, Gerald Bloom and Yue Xiao
- Cultivating health policy capacity through network governance in New Zealand: learning from divergent stories of policy implementation pp. 49-63
- Tim Tenbensel and Pushkar Raj Silwal
- Health reforms and policy capacity: the Canadian experience pp. 64-89
- Jean-Louis Denis, Susan Usher and Johanne Préval
- Critical policy capacity factors in the implementation of the community health worker program in India pp. 90-103
- Bijoya Roy, Fabiana da Cunha Saddi, Stephen Peckham and Maria Pereira Barretos
- Political legitimacy and vaccine hesitancy: Disability support workers in Australia pp. 104-116
- Helen Dickinson, Anne Kavanagh, Stefanie Dimov, Marissa Shields and Ashley McAllister
- Analytical capacity as a critical condition for responding to COVID-19 in Brazil pp. 117-130
- Natália Massaco Koga, Pedro Lucas, Pedro Arthur, Bruno Gontyjo do Couto and Marcos Luiz Vieira Soares
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