Policy Changes in China’s Family Planning: Perspectives of Advocacy Coalitions
Zhichao Li,
Xihan Tan and
Bojia Liu ()
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Zhichao Li: School of International and Public Affairs, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai 200030, China
Xihan Tan: School of Public Administration and Policy, Renmin University, Beijing 100872, China
Bojia Liu: School of Political Science and Public Administration, East China University of Political Science and Law, Shanghai 201620, China
IJERPH, 2023, vol. 20, issue 6, 1-19
Abstract:
Studies on policy change focus on governmental decision-making from a technical rationality perspective, ignoring the fact that policy change is a complicated social construction process involving multiple actors. This study used the modified advocacy coalition framework to explain changes in China’s family planning policy and discourse network analysis to show the debate on the birth control policy among multiple actors (central government, local governments, experts, media, and the public). It found that the dominant coalition and the minority coalition can learn and adjust deep core beliefs from each other; the sharing and flow of actors’ policy beliefs drive change in the network structure; and actors’ obvious preferential attachment when the promulgation of the central document, are all helpful in policy change. This study can explain macro-policy changes from a micro-perspective to reveal the process and mechanism of policy changes in China’s authoritarian regime.
Keywords: policy change; family planning policy; advocacy coalition framework; preferential attachment; discourse network analysis (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: I I1 I3 Q Q5 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2023
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