public policy report

19
PUBLIC CHOICES POLICY CHANGE GLOBAL AGENDA Edmar B. Cornejo

Upload: ed-edmar-cornejo

Post on 15-Jul-2015

120 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Public policy report

PUBLIC CHOICES

POLICY CHANGE

GLOBAL AGENDA

Edmar B. Cornejo

Page 2: Public policy report

PUBLIC CHOICE

•study of political decision making.•Public choice theory is derived from the research of James Buchanan, Gary Becker, Victor Fuchs, Richard McKenzie, and Gordon Tullock.•It applies the analysis most often associated with the study of private markets to behavior in government.

Public Choice Theory Has Been Used to Study

Prejudice Spouse seeking

Immigration Marriage

Health Divorce

Crime Fertility

Page 3: Public policy report

PUBLIC CHOICE AND THE POLITICAL

MARKETPLACE

Public choice theory applies the

economic way of thinking to the choices

that people and governments make in a

political marketplace.

The actors in the political marketplace

are:

Voters

Firms

Politicians

Bureaucrats

Page 4: Public policy report

POLITICAL MARKET PLACE

Page 5: Public policy report

POLICY CHANGE

major change in attitude, principle or

point of view

Six Theories about Policy Change

global theories developed by political

scientists to explain how various kinds of

advocacy strategies and conditions relate to

policy change

theories about common advocacy

strategies or tactics that are likely part of

broader advocacy efforts or campaigns.

Page 6: Public policy report

1. “Large Leaps” or Punctuated

Equilibrium Theory

(Baumgartner, Jones)

Political Science

How Change Happens ?

significant changes in policy and institutions

can occur when the right conditions are in

place.

This theory may be useful when

•Large-scale policy change is the primary

goal

•Strong capacity for media advocacy exists

Page 7: Public policy report
Page 8: Public policy report

2. “Coalition” Theory or Advocacy

Coalition Framework

(Sabatier, Jenkins-Smith)

Political Science

How Change Happens ?

through coordinated activity among a

range of individuals with the same core

policy beliefs

This theory may be useful when

•A sympathetic administration is in office

•A strong group of allies with a common

goal is in place or can be formed

Page 9: Public policy report
Page 10: Public policy report

3. “Policy Windows” or Agenda Setting

(Kingdon)

Political ScienceHow Change Happens ?

advocates successfully connect two or more components of the policy process: the way a problem is defined, the policy solution to the problem or the political climate surrounding their issue.

This theory may be useful when

•Multiple policy streams can be addressed simultaneously (problem definition, policy solutions and/or political climate)•Internal capacity exists to create, identify, and act on policy windows

Page 11: Public policy report
Page 12: Public policy report

4. “Messaging and Frameworks”

or Prospect Theory

(Tversky & Kahneman)

PsychologyHow Change Happens ?

Individuals’ policy preferences or willingness to accept them will vary depending on how options are framed or presented.

This theory may be useful whenThe issue needs to be redefined as part of a larger campaign or effortA key focus of the work is on increasing awareness, agreement on problem definition, or an issue’s salience

Page 13: Public policy report
Page 14: Public policy report

5. “Power Politics” or Power Elites Theory

(C. Wright Mills, Domhoff)

Sociology

How Change Happens ?

working directly with those with power

to make decisions or influence decision

making.

This theory may be useful when

One or more key allies is in place

The focus is on incremental policy change

(e.g., administrative or rule changes)

Page 15: Public policy report
Page 16: Public policy report

6. “Grassroots” or Community Organizing

Theory

(Alinsky, Biklen)

Social Psychology

How Change Happens ?

collective action by members of the

community who work on changing problems

affecting their lives.

This theory may be useful when

A distinct group of individuals is directly

affected by an issue

The advocacy organization can and is

willing to play a “convener” or “capacity-

builder” role rather than the “driver” role

Page 17: Public policy report
Page 18: Public policy report

GLOBAL AGENDA

Invest in technology

Promote a global IT market

Accelerate the development of small and

medium-size enterprises

Ensure choice in government procurement

Encourage and enable research.

Expand broadband access

Create opportunities for youth

Improve education through greater use of

technology

Increase access for people with disabilities

and older adults

Page 19: Public policy report

Embrace digital government

Improve health and healthcare

Strengthen efforts to fight cybercrime

Address energy and environmental

challenges

Privatisation

Terrorism