000 02838 a2200301 4500
001 1032081953
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008 250312042021GB eng
020 _a9781032081953
037 _bTaylor & Francis
_cGBP 40.99
_fBB
040 _a01
041 _aeng
072 7 _aJP
_2thema
072 7 _aJP
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072 7 _aPOL000000
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072 7 _a320.6
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100 1 _aIris Geva-May
245 1 0 _aInstitutions and Governance in Comparative Policy Analysis Studies
_bVolume Two
250 _a1
260 _aOxford
_bRoutledge
_c20210802
300 _a502 p
520 _bVolume Two of the Classics of Comparative Policy Analysis , contains chapters concerned with "Institutions and Governance in Comparative Policy Analysis Studies". They highlight that at the core of any policy making, the different institutions and modes of governance have a significant effect. Questions about the impact of governance have become more central to comparative policy analysis as scholars have given more attention to globalization, organizational cultural differences, policy learning, transfer, and diffusion. The chapters included in this volume tackle the nature of policies and policy analytic practices within and across organizations, actors and institutions as well as among governance modes. The chapters demonstrate the ways in which institutions and governance in the public and private sectors, shape policies, and conversely, how policy choices can shape the institutions associated with them. Other chapters focus on how the diffusion of knowledge and lesson drawing address challenges of policy making, cooperation and harmonization. "Institutions and Governance in Comparative Policy Analysis Studies" will be of great interest to scholars and learners of public policy and social sciences, as well as to practitioners considering what can be reliably contextualized, learned, facilitated or avoided given their own institutional or governance systems. The chapters were originally published as articles in the Journal of Comparative Policy Analysis which in the last two decades has pioneered the development of comparative public policy. The volume is part of a four-volume series, the Classics of Comparative Policy Analysis including Theories and Methods, Institutions and Governance, Regional Comparisons, and Policy Sectors. Each volume also showcases a new chapter comparing interrelated domains of study with comparative public policy: political science, public administration, governance and policy design, authored by JCPA co-editors Giliberto Capano, Iris Geva-May, Michael Howlett, Leslie Pal and B. Guy Peters.
700 1 _aB. Guy Peters
_4B01
700 1 _aJoselyn Muhleisen
_4B01
999 _c1519
_d1519