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Policy Studies1997 - 2025
 Current editor(s): Toby James From Taylor & Francis JournalsBibliographic data for series maintained by Chris Longhurst ().
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 Volume 42, issue 5-6, 2021
 
  Assessing the policy effects of political leaders: a layered framework   pp. 437-454 Toby S. JamesAmerica after Trump: from “clean” to “dirty” democracy?   pp. 455-472 Roberto Stefan Foa and Yascha MounkTrump and the “deep state”   pp. 473-490 Robert B. HorwitzTrump and racial equality in America? No pretense at all!   pp. 491-508 Paula D. McClainThe visual politics and policy of Donald Trump   pp. 509-527 Dermot HodsonTrump and Congress   pp. 528-543 Laura Ellyn SmithTrump’s lasting impact on the federal judiciary   pp. 544-562 Christine L. NemacheckDonald Trump's impact on the Republican Party   pp. 563-579 Michael EspinozaThe macroeconomic impact of Trump   pp. 580-591 Benjamin Born, Gernot Müller, Moritz Schularick and Petr SedlacekTrump’s (mis)management of the COVID-19 pandemic in the US   pp. 592-610 Naim Kapucu and Donald MoynihanTrump’s authoritarian neoliberal governance and the US-Mexican border   pp. 611-627 Michelle Keck and Monica Clua-LosadaThe environmental legacy of President Trump   pp. 628-645 Elizabeth BombergPresident Trump’s transgender moral panic   pp. 646-661 Christopher Pepin-Neff and Aaron CohenDonald Trump’s Jacksonian and Jeffersonian foreign policy   pp. 662-681 Jan Niklas RolfTrump and US soft power   pp. 682-698 Myunghee Kim and Jonathan O. KnuckeyTrump, trust and the transatlantic relationship   pp. 699-719 Kristian Nielsen and Anna DimitrovaThe Trump administration and China: policy continuity or transformation?   pp. 720-737 Edward Ashbee and Steven HurstCybersecurity policy and the Trump administration   pp. 738-754 Jacob ShivelyThe effects of Donald Trump   pp. 755-769 Toby S. James Volume 42, issue 4, 2021
 
  Policy entrepreneurs and anti-racism policies   pp. 327-345 Adi Binhas and Nissim CohenThe expediency of policy integration   pp. 346-361 Jeroen J. L. CandelMeta-governance and the segregated city: difficulties with realizing the participatory ethos in network governance – evidence from Malmö City, Sweden   pp. 362-380 Oscar L. LarssonImproving stakeholder engagement in local strategic planning – experience sharing based on Portuguese examples   pp. 381-396 Maria Fernandes, Ana Lopes and Ana Lúcia SargentoCentralizing cohesion policy in times of austerity: evidence from the policy cycle   pp. 397-414 Mattia CasulaThe impact of the school choice policy on student sorting: evidence from Seoul, South Korea   pp. 415-436 Sun Jung Oh and Hosung Sohn Volume 42, issue 3, 2021
 
  Editorial: managing health and social care after covid: what works and who decides?   pp. 229-231 Toby S. JamesHow policy tools evolve in the healthcare sector. Five countries compared   pp. 232-251 Federico TothIs anyone listening? Inequality in New Zealand’s fully funded hearing aid scheme   pp. 252-270 Andrew Wallace, Andy Asquith and Shane ScahillFacilitators and challenges of community action for health. Comparative analysis of four case studies in neighbourhoods of Barcelona   pp. 271-288 Nicolás Barbieri, Raquel Gallego, Ernesto Morales, Carolina Muñoz-Mendoza and Bernat Quintana TerésPositioning the ageing subject: articulations of choice in Swedish and UK health and social care   pp. 289-307 Jens Lindberg and Anna Sofia LundgrenFederalism and decision making in health care: the influence of subnational governments in Brazil   pp. 308-326 Catarina Ianni Segatto and Daniel Béland Volume 42, issue 2, 2021
 
  An exploration of the diffusion of policy termination: the repeal of prevailing wage laws by US state governments   pp. 117-131 Suk Joon HwangThe scientific and technological interdisciplinary research of government research institutes: network analysis of the innovation cluster in South Korea   pp. 132-151 Yoonjung Jung, Euiseok Kim and Wonjoon KimThe effects of the political environment on transparency: evidence from Spanish local governments   pp. 152-172 Maria Teresa Balaguer-Coll and Maria Isabel Brun-MartosMulti-stakeholder initiatives, policy learning and institutionalization: the surprising failure of open government in Norway   pp. 173-192 Christopher WilsonA framework in analysing the strategies for governing innovation networks for public innovation   pp. 193-209 Yanwei LiThe politics of policymaking: policy co-creation in Singapore’s financial sector   pp. 210-227 J. J. Woo Volume 42, issue 1, 2021
 
  Policy Studies during an age of uncertainty   pp. 1-5 Toby S. JamesAbolishing politics in the shadow of austerity? Assessing the (De)politicization of budgetary policy in crisis-ridden Spain (2008–2015)   pp. 6-23 Joan MiróKnowledge utilization in the regulatory state: an empirical examination of Schrefler’s typology   pp. 24-41 Michael ZarkinIdentifying historical policy regimes in the Canadian and Australian communications industries using a model of path dependent, punctuated equilibrium   pp. 42-59 Michael de Percy and Heba BatainahA magic bullet in policy communication? On the ambiguous use of framing in policy research   pp. 60-79 Pascal D. KönigCzech postcommunist trouble with participatory governance. Toward an analysis of the cultural agency of policy discourses   pp. 80-97 Anna DurnováWhen traditional principles bring coherence in complex networks management: the case of “Imihigo” in public policy implementation   pp. 98-116 Masengesho Kamuzinzi Volume 41, issue 6, 2020
 
  World Bank technical assistance: participation, policy movement, and sympathetic interlocutors   pp. 567-585 Adrian Robert BazbauersA street intercept strategy to research police corruption in Afghanistan   pp. 586-602 Danny SinghParticipatory budgets in Brazil and Portugal: comparing patterns of dissemination   pp. 603-622 Roberto Falanga and Lígia Helena Hahn LüchmannMaking sense of complexity in governance: the case of local public management in the City of Stockholm   pp. 623-640 Nils Kvilvang, Erik Bjurström and Roland AlmqvistThe raising of the normal retirement age (NRA) in the ageing era in the advanced countries: the dilemma between securing the stability of the pension system versus the risk of increasing unemployment   pp. 641-662 Ziva Rozen-Bakher Volume 41, issue 5, 2020
 
  The political economy of digital data: introduction to the special issue   pp. 439-446 Barbara PrainsackFit for purpose? The GDPR and the governance of European digital health   pp. 447-467 Luca Marelli, Elisa Lievevrouw and Ine Van HoyweghenThe problem of innovation in technoscientific capitalism: data rentiership and the policy implications of turning personal digital data into a private asset   pp. 468-487 Kean Birch, Margaret Chiappetta and Anna ArtyushinaDigital slavery, time for abolition?   pp. 488-506 Mick ChisnallDatafied child welfare services: unpacking politics, economics and power   pp. 507-526 Joanna Redden, Lina Dencik and Harry WarneThe promise of precision: datafication in medicine, agriculture and education   pp. 527-546 Declan Kuch, M. Kearnes and K. GulsonThe value of healthcare data: to nudge, or not?   pp. 547-562 Barbara PrainsackOil crisis: the political economy of digital data. Conclusion of the special issue   pp. 563-566 Barbara Prainsack Volume 41, issue 4, 2020
 
  Introduction: towards deliberative policy analysis 2.0   pp. 295-306 Koen P.R. Bartels, Hendrik Wagenaar and Ya LiSymposium: revisiting the three pillars of Deliberative Policy Analysis   pp. 307-330 Selen A. Ercan, Anna Durnová, Anne Loeber and Hendrik WagenaarThe administrative making of the recycler   pp. 331-349 Roy L. Heidelberg and Sarah SurakJumping Off the treadmill: transforming NRM to systemic governing with systemic co-inquiry   pp. 350-371 Catherine Allan, Ray L. Ison, Ross Colliver, Laura Mumaw, Moragh Mackay, Luisa Perez-Mujica and Philip WallisDeliberation on the risks of nanoscale materials: learning from the partnership between environmental NGO EDF and chemical company DuPont   pp. 372-391 Lotte KrabbenborgHow action research can make deliberative policy analysis more transformative   pp. 392-410 Koen P.R. Bartels, Davydd J. Greenwood and Julia M. WittmayerDeliberative policy analysis, interconnectedness and institutional design: lessons from “Red Vienna”   pp. 411-437 Hendrik Wagenaar and Florian Wenninger Volume 41, issue 2-3, 2020
 
  Introduction: the case for inclusive voting practices   pp. 113-130 Toby S. James and Holly Ann GarnettRestoring voting rights: evidence that reversing felony disenfranchisement increases political efficacy   pp. 131-150 Victoria ShinemanAre inequalities in representation lower under compulsory voting?   pp. 151-171 Eric Guntermann, Ruth Dassonneville and Peter MillerConceptualizing more inclusive elections: violence against women in elections and gendered electoral violence   pp. 172-189 Paige Schneider and David CarrollElectoral integrity, voter fraud and voter ID in polling stations: lessons from English local elections   pp. 190-209 Toby S. James and Alistair ClarkImplementing voter ID: lessons from Missouri, USA   pp. 210-229 Joseph Anthony and David C. KimballWaiting to vote: the effect of administrative irregularities at polling locations and voter confidence   pp. 230-248 Bridgett A. KingDisability and election administration in the United States: barriers and improvements   pp. 249-270 April A. Johnson and Sierra PowellMigrant populations and external voting: the politics of suffrage expansion in Central America   pp. 271-287 Kevin PallisterInclusive voting practices: lessons for theory, praxis, and the future research agenda   pp. 288-294 Toby S. James and Holly Ann Garnett Volume 41, issue 1, 2020
 
  Correction   pp. I-II The EditorsInnovation and SMEs in Interreg policy: too early to move beyond bike lanes?   pp. 1-22 Jos Van Den Broek, Roel Rutten and Paul BenneworthMaking research relevant to policymaking: from brokering boundaries to drawing on practices   pp. 23-41 Robert DuivemanThe political economy of Public Employment Services: measurement and disempowered empowerment?   pp. 42-62 Alex Nunn and Jamie MorganThe political economy of welfare in Singapore: explaining continuity and change   pp. 63-79 Gyu-Jin HwangUnderstanding American cultural policy: the multi-level governance of the arts and humanities   pp. 80-97 Eleonora RedaelliThe impact of powerful authorities and trustful taxpayers: evidence for the extended slippery slope framework from Austria, Finland, and Hungary   pp. 98-111 Katharina Gangl, Eva Hofmann, Barbara Hartl and Mihály Berkics |  |