Ideas, institutions, and policy change
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Abstract
Seeking to amend historical institutionalism, this article draws on the political science literature on ideas and the sociological literature on framing to discuss three ways in which ideational processes impact policy change. First, such processes help to construct the problems and issues that enter the policy agenda. Second, ideational processes shape the assumptions that affect the content of reform proposals. Third, these processes can become discursive weapons that participate in the construction of reform imperatives. Overall, ideational processes impact the ways policy actors perceive their interests and the environment in which they mobilize. Yet, such processes are not the only catalyst of policy…
Citation impact
612
total citations
- FWCI
- 81.18
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 130
Citations per year
Authors
1Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Framing (construction)
- Politics
- New institutionalism
- Sociology
- Political science
- Institutionalism
- Historical institutionalism
- Public administration
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Peace, Justice and strong institutions
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