Navigating the policy stream: Contested solutions and organizational strategies of policy entrepreneurship

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27 avril 2020

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info:eu-repo/semantics/reference/issn/2679-3873

Ce document est lié à :
info:eu-repo/semantics/reference/issn/2706-6274

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https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ , info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess




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Livia Johannesson et al., « Navigating the policy stream: Contested solutions and organizational strategies of policy entrepreneurship », International Review of Public Policy, ID : 10.4000/irpp.740


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In the Multiple Streams Framework (MSF), policy entrepreneurs are primarily defined by their ability to promote and seek support for policy solutions. Recent research, however, points to the importance of policy entrepreneurs as “arena shapers” who attempt to create favorable conditions for their solutions in conflictual policy settings. In this paper, we seek to incorporate such strategies into the MSF by drawing on the organizational foundations of the original garbage can model. The main question is what role do policy entrepreneurs play in “organizing out” opposition from pre-decision processes, as a way of advancing contested policy solutions. We answer this question in a case study of a controversial hospital “mega-project” in Stockholm healthcare that shows how a small but influential team of entrepreneurs used the project as an opportunity for policy change. The study helps to identify three different organizational strategies: 1) regulating participation in order to neutralize opponents: 2) specializing attention to limit the “searchlight” and 3) sequential attention in order to reduce complexity and build commitment. While effective for advancing solutions in the face of conflict and entrenched positions, organizational strategies also have important democratic implications for the legitimacy of pre-decision processes and the prospects for broad deliberation.

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