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  1. Only showing results from link.springer.com

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  2. link.springer.com

    Policy feedback research faces a potential pivot point owing to recent theoretical and substantive advances. Concerted attention now spans new scientific communities, such as climate focused socio-technical transitions literature, as well as reinvigorated attention to environmental politics or policy. Rather than being interested in abstractly explaining policy stability and change, this ...
    Author:Sebastian Sewerin, Daniel Béland, Benjamin CashorePublished:2020
  3. link.springer.com

    The policy feedback literature was initially concerned with explaining how positive feedback could lead to self-reinforcing policy trajectories. More recently, policy scholars have devoted more attention to negative feedbacks which can result in self-undermining policy trajectories. This article moves beyond these two well-known pathways to policy endurance and change by conceptually outlining ...
    Author:Carsten Daugbjerg, Carsten Daugbjerg, Adrian KayPublished:2020
  4. link.springer.com

    This paper focuses on the transferability of policy feedback and responsiveness theories. These theories have enjoyed a great deal of scholarly interest in the past years and are widely applied in different country contexts. However, this theory transfer tends to be more focused on the empirical challenges while neglecting the fact that it also involves normative implications about ...
  5. link.springer.com

    Public policy has been conceptualized as the output from the political process shaping the political agenda, which in turn, acts as input impacting on subsequent policymaking (Pierson 1993).In effect, public policies generate their own political durability by building extensive constituencies which, in turn, affect the preferences and capacities of elite actors such as interest groups, elected ...
    Author:Andrew P. Kakabadse, Nada KakabadsePublished:2021
  6. link.springer.com

    1 The term policy relevant feedback is used to reect the transmission of evaluative or informational inputs and signals in policymaking to the original or controlling source. As such, it diers from 'policy feedback' that focuses on how "existing policies can shape key aspects of politics and policymaking" (Béland & Schlager, 2019).
  7. link.springer.com

    input on implementation problems and how they can be solved (Haverland & Lieerink, 2012). In this respect, policy feedback from implementing agencies can be regarded a type ... stability for some instruments in because of potential administrative and organizational costs involved in changing their practices (Béland, 2009; Moynihan & Soss, 2014 ...
  8. link.springer.com

    46) "Consultations constitute a direct communication link between decision makers and affected actors and represent an important channel through which policy feedback is received in the policy process about the feasibility of policy choices, the legitimacy of adopted measures and the potential challenges in policy implementation (Rasmussen et ...
  9. link.springer.com

    The implications of this early wave of scholarship on policy feedback for gov-ernment responsiveness are ambivalent. On the one hand, policy feedback theory implies that policy-makers shy away from policy decisions that are unpopular with largepartsofthe electorate,evenif these policieswouldbe inlinewith theirideolog-ical predispositions.
  10. link.springer.com

    Aug 1, 2024Within the policy on citizen involvement and co-creation, feedback techniques may also be considered. The policies can be redesigned or revised based on the feedback that is gathered from online platforms, citizen dialogues at different venues, etc. [39,40,41]. By actively engaging citizens (as decision-makers), these processes cultivate a ...
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