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Policy Entrepreneurs, Crises, and Policy Change

Policy Entrepreneurs, Crises, and Policy Change
Open Access

Policy Entrepreneurs, Crises, and Policy Change

Evangelia Petridou, Mid Sweden University and NTNU Social Research
Jörgen Sparf, Mid Sweden University and NTNU Social Research
Nikolaos Zahariadis, Rhodes College
Thomas Birkland, North Carolina State University
January 2025
Available
Paperback
9781009314671

    Increasingly, policymaking takes place while extraordinary events threaten fundamental societal values. During turbulent times, policy entrepreneurs emerge as pivotal figures. They are energetic actors who pursue dynamic change in public policy and, whereas we know much about how they promote innovation and change in normal policymaking, we know less about how they behave in crises, and even less about how different crises influence policy entrepreneurial action. This Element focuses on interaction between policy entrepreneurs and crises. It analyzes policy entrepreneurial action in six case studies – three fast-burning and three creeping crises – to ascertain policy entrepreneurs' strategies and effectiveness during extraordinary events. It proposes crisis policy entrepreneurial strategies, a framework to understand outcomes based on policy entrepreneurial action and type of crisis and suggests avenues for further research on policy entrepreneurs and crises, including implications for crisis managers. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.

    Product details

    January 2025
    Paperback
    9781009314671
    88 pages
    230 × 151 × 6 mm
    0.146kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • 1. Policy entrepreneurs in a crisis context
    • 2. Business as unusual? Crises as a policy context for policy entrepreneurial action
    • 3. Policy entrepreneurs and policy outcomes in fast-burning crises
    • 4. Policy entrepreneurs and policy outcomes in creeping crises
    • 5. The politics of crisis policy entrepreneurship and a research agenda
    • Bibliography.
      Authors
    • Evangelia Petridou , Mid Sweden University and NTNU Social Research
    • Jörgen Sparf , Mid Sweden University and NTNU Social Research
    • Nikolaos Zahariadis , Rhodes College
    • Thomas Birkland , North Carolina State University