代理(哲学)
矛盾心理
制度主义
社会学
移民
德国的
政治
自治
自由化
公共政策
移民政策
新制度論
谈判
政治经济学
实证经济学
政治学
经济
社会科学
法学
社会心理学
心理学
考古
历史
作者
Christina Boswell,James Hampshire
标识
DOI:10.1111/1475-6765.12170
摘要
Abstract Political science literature tends to depict the role of ideas in policy in two distinct ways: as strategic tools mobilised by agents to achieve pre‐given preferences; or as structures imposing constraints on what is considered legitimate or feasible. Discursive institutionalism seeks to combine these insights, suggesting that while actors are indeed constrained by deeply entrenched ideas, they nonetheless enjoy some autonomy in selecting and combining ideas. This article seeks to further develop this approach in two ways. First, it identifies three discursive strategies through which policy actors can selectively mobilise ideas: they may foreground one level over others; exploit ambivalence in public philosophies; or link programme ideas over time by invoking ‘policy legacies’. Second, the article elucidates the mechanisms through which such strategic selections can in turn modify existing public philosophies and programme ideas, thereby influencing policy change. These claims are examined by comparing discourse on immigration policy liberalisation in Germany and the United Kingdom between 2000 and 2008. Evidence is found of all three discursive strategies. Moreover, the article shows how, in the German case, these discursive representations led to longer‐term adjustments in underlying programme ideas and public philosophies on immigration.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI