Policy Learning and Failure
- 1 October 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Journal of Public Policy
- Vol. 12 (4) , 331-354
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0143814x00005602
Abstract
Multiple knowledges are available for utilisation in policy choice. The rank ordering of knowledges for use in decisionmaking is thus a fundamental predecision. This article shows how this predecision necessarily constrains the processes associated with a politics of ideas, using cases from American international commodity policy. Even when the supposed preconditions of this sort of politics are present, policy change did not occur when the proposed ideas arose from a knowledge accorded secondary status in policymaking circles. Several implications are discussed for the influence and the study of ideational politics. Ultimately, the politics of ideas, so often portrayed through cases of innovation, may be quite conservative, contained by knowledge hierarchies which reflect prior politicaxl circumstances.Keywords
This publication has 40 references indexed in Scilit:
- Explaining Change in Policy Subsystems: Analysis of Coalition Stability and Defection over TimeAmerican Journal of Political Science, 1991
- Toward Better Theories of the Policy ProcessPS: Political Science and Politics, 1991
- Alternative Theories of the Policy Process: Reflections on Research Strategy for the Study of Nuclear Waste PolicyPS: Political Science and Politics, 1991
- Unclogging the ArteriesPolicy Studies Journal, 1991
- Evidence, Argument, and Persuasion in the Policy Process.Contemporary Sociology: A Journal of Reviews, 1990
- Instruments of Government: Perceptions and ContextsJournal of Public Policy, 1989
- POLICY LEARNING AND THE EVOLUTION OF FEDERAL HAZARDOUS WASTE POLICYPolicy Studies Journal, 1985
- EFFICIENCY VERSUS SOCIAL LEARNING: A RECONSIDERATION OF THE IMPLEMENTATION PROCESSReview of Policy Research, 1985
- Reforms as experiments.American Psychologist, 1969
- The Science of "Muddling Through"Public Administration Review, 1959