The Craft of Policy Design: Can It Be More Than Art?
David L. Weinter
Review of Policy Research, 1992, vol. 11, issue 3‐4, 370-388
Abstract:
The craft for predicting and evaluating the impacts of policy alternatives has received much of the attention of students of public policy analysis. Relatively little attention has been given to understanding and improving the craft for designing alternative policies. Beyond catalogs of generic policy instruments, two sources provide useful insights into policy design. First, the study of institutional choice as policy design draws attention to the selection of procedures and incentive systems to achieve substantive policy outcomes. Second, the study of the manipulation of the dimensions of policy choice (heresethetics), which provides insight into strategy in political arenas, may help with the broader problem of packaging and presenting policies so that they remain viable during implementation.
Date: 1992
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https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1541-1338.1992.tb00479.x
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