Abstract
The paper develops a geographical approach to the issues of policy transfer and transformation, taking the form of a critical dialogue with three literatures at the borderlands of political science, comparative institutionalism, and political sociology. Making the case for moving beyond rational-choice frameworks and essentialized, formalist representations of policy transfer, the paper advocates a social-constructivist understanding of policy mobilities-and-mutations, sensitive to the constitutive roles of spatiotemporal context.
Citation impact
600
total citations
- FWCI
- 175.54
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 88
Citations per year
Authors
1Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Politics
- Sociology
- Context (archaeology)
- Historical institutionalism
- Epistemology
- Institutionalism
- Policy transfer
- New institutionalism
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