Policy process theories Petr Ocelík ESSn4007/ MEBn4001 7th January 2021 Outline • Public policy and policy process • Overview of the policy process theories • A network perspective on policy process Public policy and policy process The “political” • Activities through which people make, preserve, and change the general rules under which they live (Heywood 2012: 2) • → it produces collectively biding outcomes (policies) that bring unequal distribution of costs and benefits • This involves both cooperative (seeking for resources and allies) and conflictual (interfering with opponents) interactions Polity, politics, policy • Polity: institutional framework of the political system • Politics: focus on interactions of the actors, e.g.: voting patterns within the polity • Policy: focus on formation of particular domains, e.g.: social or energy, within the polity through collectively biding decisions What is public policy? • Public policy: a government policy that (1) guides and regulates actions in a specific (2) issue area and within a (3) particular jurisdiction • More inclusive definition: the sum of direct and indirect topically bounded government activities with social impacts (see Cairney 2012) • In democratic regimes, public policies are enacted through complex legislative processes How is policy made? • The policy-making process can be captured by policy cycle model (Lasswell 1956) Cairney 2019 How is policy made? • But, what about? 1. Actors not directly participating in the legislative process? 2. More generally, context of the legislative process? • Thus, policy process is much more complex than policy cycle suggests... Policy process theories Policy process • Policy process: a process through which the public policy (or its components) is produced, terminated, or revised • Policy process is shaped by: 1. interactions of diverse actors influenced by institutional structures (Ostrom 2014;Sabatier 1988) 2. policy discourses and frames (Shanahan et al. 2011) • (number of more general structures and events) • Different policy process theories tend to emphasize different dimensions of the policy process Advocacy Coalition Framework • Policy process involves (1) diversity of actors and their groups and occurs (2) mostly at the level of a policy subsystem – subset of political system defined by issue area • Actors perceive policy problems through a system of policy beliefs and struggle to translate their beliefs into policies • Advocacy coalitions (1) share policy beliefs and (2) coordinate their efforts → Patterns of actors (coalitions) interactions and subsystem configurations facilitate or constrain policy change ACF: Coal policy in Czechia Two competing coalitions in a fragmented political system (Ocelík et al. 2019) Narrative Policy Framework • Diverse actors and their coalitions use narratives to influence policy process (Jones et al. 2014) • A narrative includes: 1. Setting: contextual factors (e.g., socioeconomic) 2. Characters: heroes, villains, victims, and beneficiaries 3. Plot: situates the characters, e.g., “decline plot” 4. Moral: a take-home lessons containing the solution to the policy problem → Specific narrative strategies aim at particular audience(s) to facilitate or constrain policy change NPF: Nuclear energy debate in India • Two coalitions with competing narratives (Gupta et al. 2014) → The pro-nuclear coalition succeeded in establishing a “winning tale” emphasizing diffusion of benefits and scientific certainty A network perspective on policy process Policy process as a network • Policy process can be captured as a network: 1. of diverse, both state and non-state, actors who are 2. centered around a specific issue and who interact at 3. the subsystem level and within 4. geographically and juridically defined boundaries Policy process as a network • Policy process can be captured as a network: 1. of diverse, both state and non-state, actors who are → companies, NGOs, social movements, interest groups, academia, etc. 2. centered around a specific issue and who interact at → taxation, healthcare, migration, energy, security, etc. 3. the subsystem level and within → a subset of political system: government, parliament, courts, advisory bodies, etc. 4. geographically and juridically defined boundaries → typically, state boundaries and exclusive national competence Policy process as a network • The characteristics of the actors (typically organizations) and their interactions can be defined by: 1. Nodal (individual) attributes: organization type, budget, policy preferences, etc. 1. Ties: cooperation, exchange of resources, information flows, membership in umbrella organizations, etc. • In practice, actors are embedded within multiple types of relationships (multiplexity) De Domenico et al. 2014 Policy process as a network Crebs and Holley 2004 Maslov and Sneppen 2002 Policy process as a network • The current governance systems are complex and often non- hierarchical • Structure matters: different forms of organization (polycentric vs. core-periphery) might influence policy outcomes • Importantly, policy processes are different for different policy issues (e.g., taxation vs. climate change) • Government is not the only player in the game → we need to take into account more actors Normann 2017 Conclusions • Public polices are topically bounded sets of governmental (in)actions with societal impacts • They result from policy processes that involve diverse actors and their coalitions • Policy actors interact in complex environments including institutional and discursive structures as well as more general trends and events • Policy process theories emphasize various dimensionsof the policy process → room for theoretical elaboration and integration