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  1. Only showing results from www.jstor.org

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  2. whether the policy at issue is distributive, redistributive, or regula tory. Wilson (1973) theorized that patterns of political engagement depend on the ways that policies distribute costs and benefits. Policy feedback denotes the potential for policies to transform politics and influence future courses of policy development.
  3. The increased scope of public policy and the close fit between the con-cept of policy feedback and a new social science agenda has fueled a growth of research on the topic. The emergence of a substantial and broadly persuasive literature on policy feedback represents a consider-able achievement for what might be called a "historical ...
  4. scholarship on policy feedback, we pursue a quantitative case study of the potential for new policies to move public opinion. Our analysis reveals that welfare reform in the 1990s produced few changes in mass opinion. To explain this result, we propose a general framework for the analysis of mass feedback effects.
  5. Designing policy resilience: lessons from the Affordable Care Act Download; XML; Disaggregating the dependent variable in policy feedback research: an analysis of the EU Emissions Trading System Download; XML; The role of actors in the policy design process: introducing design coalitions to explain policy output Download; XML
  6. participation. While the policy feedback literature has only addressed a handful of policies, these studies point out specific ways to measure and assess the civic implications of policy design and implemen tation. Performance measurement has a largely untapped potential to further examine and verify the relationship between programs and ...
  7. the inputs collected and explain how they have been taken into account (Coleman and Getze 2001). Similar expectations of adoption of submitted inputs have been noted in forums that collect feedback from employees (Hrastinski et al. 2011) and customers (Di Gangi and Wasko 2009). These unique aspects of OPDFs and feedback forums warrant separate ...
  8. desire to enhance legitimacy in democratic governance (Cohen 1989; Fung 2007). A fundamental premise of representative democracy is that laws and policies are rendered legitimate because citizens have had opportunities to influence the politicians and par ties that make those policies and because subsequent elections will
  9. Richard C. Fording a , Dana Patton b , The Affordable Care Act and the Diffusion of Policy Feedback: The Case of Medicaid Work Requirements, RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences, Vol. 6, No. 2, The Social, Political, and Economic Effects of the Affordable Care Act (July 2020), pp. 131-153
  10. Keywords: Social Media, Public Policy, Civic Engagement, Soft Power. 1. Introduction Conventional instruments of public policy are becoming inadequate for addressing phenomena present in the digital age. It seems there is a "missing rib" for which the traditional policy process seeks to complement as the world goes digital.
  11. LEAA, 1974) incorporated policy inputs (such as resources, agency guidelines, and state laws) as well as feedback loops from policy consequences to agency ac-tivities which indicated an expectation that information produced by the study should result in change. In some of the frameworks, the entire system was enclosed
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