Summary: 28 Sociology Of Public Policy Tentamen
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1 The Social Construction of Social Problems and Agenda Setting in Public Policy
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1.1 Public sociology
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4 functies van sociologie in public policy by Burawoy
- Professional
sociology (for academicpeers ) - sociologisch onderzoek voor academische
collega's - Policy
sociology (for policy makers) - sociologisch onderzoek om beleidsmakers te adviseren
- Public
sociology (for citizens and 'the public') - voor normale burgers
- Critical
sociology ([self]criticism ofpeers ) - Bekritiseren van de manier van onderzoeken/ rol van sociologen
- Professional
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Constellations of Power and Interests
Instrumentive: solving puzzle/problem
Reflexive: concerned with dialogue about ends. -
1.2 Power in public policy
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3 dimensies van Macht in public policy
Public policy has all to do with power.
Hoe je macht kunt analyseren:Pluralisme : macht bepaald wie bepaald is in besluitvorming --> decision making power.- concreet, waarneembaar gedrag ten opzichte van waarneembare conflicten.
- Agenda setting: macht bepaald welke
issues wel/niet op de agenda komen -->non-decision makingpower andpotential issues . - non besluiten en potential
issues . - Ideologische hegemony: macht is het vermogen to shape wensen,verlangens en
fears van anderen ... Zonder dat ze dat zelf weten -->propoganda enframing diepercepties beïnvloeden. - even making people to want things
opposed to their ownself-interest .
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1. Pluralisme [one dimensional view of power]
De macht om te kiezen van listed choices; beperkte keuze.Kijkt naar actually genomenbeslissingen in beleid en wie dezebelissingen heeft genomen; die heeft de macht.- Conflict tussen
beleidsvoorkeuren diemanifesteren in politieke actie, die socialewetenschappers kunnen observeren op basis van gedrag by political actors ('behaviouralism ') (e.g. Robert Dahl).
“a focus on behaviour in themaking of decisions on issues over which there is anobservable conflict of (subjective) interests, seen as expressing policy preferences, revealed by politicalparticipation.” -
3. Ideolgoische hegemonie [three dimensional view of power]
Adds something else to it: de voorkeuren beinvloeden van degenen over wie men macht wil uitoefenen (see alsoMarx's 'falseconciousness ; andGramsci's 'hegemony ').- Kan het uitbreken van conflicten voorkomen
- Manipulatie: Het accepteren van de huidige staat van affaires omdat men niet in staat is om het alternatief voor te
stellen-imagine .Machthebbende die doen lijken: er is geen alternatief.
“Hidden conflict, whichconsists in aconcentration between interests of thoseexercising power and the real interests of those theyexclude . These latter may not express or even be conscious of their interests.“ -
1.3 Construction of social problems
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Why do some ills (private, unfortunate situations) become an issue/ get attention/ put on the agenda?
- Not simply because of the
magnitude or gravity of the problem - Neither (solely) because on the media and their owners (capital)
- It is as much a consequence of a ‘survival of the
fittest ’ in public arena model: - Novelty en
staturation Dramatisation by policyentrepreneurs (instead of merely facts and figures)
- Not simply because of the
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1.4 Agenda-setting
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3 questions central to analysis of agenda-setting in public policy
R&D stress the central role of policy discourse-narrative inagenda-setting :- Among all competing concerns of individuals and groups, what
determines which ones will succeed in gaining the active attention of politicaldecision-makers ? - How do problems and solutions come to be matched together in public policy
formulation ? - Who are the key actors in
agenda-setting , and by what means do they pursue theirobjectives ?
- Among all competing concerns of individuals and groups, what
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R&D: Narrative
- Brings order and meaning to a situation
- Allows to make sense of the observation of a policy problem and to develop a cure by linking a solution to a problem
- Language is politics and all politics is language
- Rochefort & Donelly: two cases
Rellen in London in2011 (~yellow vests in France in2019 )- Occupy Wall Street in
2011 (~Extinction Rebellion in2019 )
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Rethorical tricks to block solutions - Albert O. Hirschman
Objections to government interventionPerverse : the solution willaggravate the problem (because ofunintended orunanticipated effects of the policy)Futile : ‘it wont work’ or goes beyond what a policy maker can do- Jeopardy: it is
harmful for the existing system orentails too much risks (it costs too much, it affects certain established rights or privileges)
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2 Measuring and Comparing Policies
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2.2 Policy evaluation
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2. Three (3) kinds of EX-POST evaluations
Proces evaluation : did everything go as planned?- What happened?
- Evaluation of the impact and outcome: did the policy have the intended effects?
- Which policy measures had what effect
- Economic
evaluation : was the policy cost-effective? - How much did
implementation of policy cost and what were the benefits ofimplementing it?
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Measuring and Comparing Policies - Welfare state as (comparative) variable
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Measuring and Comparing Policies - Expenditure
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Social Risks, Welfare Regimes and Intended or Non-intended Effects of Policies
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