Evolutionary approaches to the concept of drift in policy studies

Authors: Kay, A. and Baines, D.

Journal: Critical Policy Studies

Volume: 13

Issue: 2

Pages: 174-189

eISSN: 1946-018X

ISSN: 1946-0171

DOI: 10.1080/19460171.2017.1414618

Abstract:

This article is a contribution to the emerging line of scholarly inquiry into the concept of drift in the study of public policy. It investigates a persistent problem in the literature on policy drift: how to explain variation in responses to drift, separately from the process of drift itself and in order to do so how to incorporate a model of agency into the concept of drift. We argue that the broader project of evolutionary thinking in policy studies can help reveal the analytical value of an evolutionary metaphor to our understanding of policy drift. The argument is developed through a three-stage generic framework of drift in which an evolutionary metaphor helps first by assisting with accounts of the role of selection pressures in drift and, second, by supporting different accounts of agency in recognizing and responding to drift. The utility of this novel policy drift framework is illustrated through a case study of UK pharmaceutical services policy.

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/29890/

Source: Scopus

Evolutionary approaches to the concept of drift in policy studies

Authors: Kay, A. and Baines, D.

Journal: CRITICAL POLICY STUDIES

Volume: 13

Issue: 2

Pages: 174-189

eISSN: 1946-018X

ISSN: 1946-0171

DOI: 10.1080/19460171.2017.1414618

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/29890/

Source: Web of Science (Lite)

Evolutionary approaches to the concept of drift in policy studies

Authors: Baines, D.

Journal: Critical Policy Studies

Publisher: Routledge

ISSN: 1946-018X

Abstract:

Within the important seam of policy studies dedicated to understanding how institutions and policies change over time, attention is increasingly being paid to cataloguing patterns of change in the absence of ‘big reform’. The concept of policy drift has been widely referenced in this line of work as an intuitively appealing label for an empirical pattern seemingly observed across many different policy sectors. Although evolutionary approaches are not explicitly acknowledged in this line of inquiry, in this paper we argue that they have much to contribute. First, evolutionary thinking helps clarify drift as a distinct concept from those which are often co-listed as competitors for the analysis of cumulative, sub-surface and endogenous policy change: displacement, layering, conversion or exhaustion. Second, an evolutionary approach casts light on the role of agency in drift sequences, something poorly understood and articulated in the drift literature. It remains unclear whether policy drift should be understood as something caused directly by a political strategy employed by an influential policy actor, or, rather, as a policy sequence that is unintended by any actor in the policy process. This paper presents the argument, using an evolutionary metaphor, that it is the latter, leaving an important but necessarily separate question of the agency of policy actors: to recognise their interests in, and capacity to develop, appropriate responses to the consequences of policy drift. The third contribution of the evolutionary metaphor is to this question of agency: it extends the existing drift literature beyond a simple dichotomy of maintaining or reversing drift by identifying acclimatisation and adaptation as distinct responses to drift in the policy environment. The paper is structured to develop the argument that the nascent literature on evolutionary approaches in policy studies can help bolster our understanding of drift.

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/29890/

Source: Manual

Evolutionary approaches to the concept of drift in policy studies

Authors: Baines, D.

Journal: Critical Policy Studies

Volume: 13

Issue: 2

Pages: 174-189

ISSN: 1946-018X

Abstract:

Within the important seam of policy studies dedicated to understanding how institutions and policies change over time, attention is increasingly being paid to cataloguing patterns of change in the absence of ‘big’. The concept of policy drift has been widely referenced in this line of work as an intuitively appealing label for an empirical pattern seemingly observed across many different policy sectors. Although evolutionary approaches are not explicitly acknowledged in this line of inquiry, in this paper we argue that they have much to contribute. First, evolutionary thinking helps clarify drift as a distinct concept from those which are often co-listed as competitors for the analysis of cumulative, sub-surface and endogenous policy change: displacement, layering, conversion or exhaustion. Second, an evolutionary approach casts light on the role of agency in drift sequences, something poorly understood and articulated in the drift literature. It remains unclear whether policy drift should be understood as something caused directly by a political strategy employed by an influential policy actor, or, rather, as a policy sequence that is unintended by any actor in the policy process. This paper presents the argument, using an evolutionary metaphor, that it is the latter, leaving an important but necessarily separate question of the agency of policy actors: to recognise their interests in, and capacity to develop, appropriate responses to the consequences of policy drift. The third contribution of the evolutionary metaphor is to this question of agency: it extends the existing drift literature beyond a simple dichotomy of maintaining or reversing drift by identifying acclimatisation and adaptation as distinct responses to drift in the policy environment. The paper is structured to develop the argument that the nascent literature on evolutionary approaches in policy studies can help bolster our understanding of drift.

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/29890/

Source: BURO EPrints