Political, process and programme failures in the Brexit fiasco: exploring the role of policy deception

Authors: Baines, D., Brewer, S. and Kay, A.

Journal: Journal of European Public Policy

Volume: 27

Issue: 5

Pages: 742-760

eISSN: 1466-4429

ISSN: 1350-1763

DOI: 10.1080/13501763.2020.1722203

Abstract:

We propose a conceptual framework of policy deception to help identify, analyse and explain Brexit as a policy fiasco. The framework casts light on the political use of the device of an in/out European Union (EU) referendum by David Cameron. The paper develops the argument that the referendum did not offer a binary choice between two policy options for the United Kingdom's (UK) relationship with the EU representing different, but commensurable preferences, because one option was ‘baseless’ in that it was unfounded in any policy analysis. The label of policy deception usefully reveals that many of the political, process and programme failures at the heart of the Brexit fiasco have their roots in the referendum. We conclude that the concept of policy deception contributes usefully to emerging work on why the Brexit policy fiasco occurred, and is likely to be a fruitful topic for future work.

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/33274/

Source: Scopus

Political, process and programme failures in the Brexit fiasco: exploring the role of policy deception

Authors: Baines, D., Brewer, S. and Kay, A.

Journal: JOURNAL OF EUROPEAN PUBLIC POLICY

Volume: 27

Issue: 5

Pages: 742-760

eISSN: 1466-4429

ISSN: 1350-1763

DOI: 10.1080/13501763.2020.1722203

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/33274/

Source: Web of Science (Lite)

Political, process and programme failures in the Brexit fiasco: exploring the role of policy deception

Authors: Baines, D., Brewer, S. and Kay, A.

Publisher: Taylor and Francis

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/33274/

Source: Manual

Political, process and programme failures in the Brexit fiasco: exploring the role of policy deception

Authors: Baines, D., Brewer, S. and Kay, A.

Journal: Journal of European Public Policy

Volume: 27

Issue: 5

Pages: 742-760

Publisher: Taylor and Francis

ISSN: 1350-1763

Abstract:

We propose a conceptual framework of policy deception to help identify, analyse and explain Brexit as a policy fiasco. The framework casts light on the political use of the device of an in/out European Union (EU) referendum by David Cameron. The paper develops the argument that the referendum did not offer a binary choice between two policy options for the United Kingdom's (UK) relationship with the EU representing different, but commensurable preferences, because one option was 'baseless' in that it was unfounded in any policy analysis. The label of policy deception usefully reveals that many of the political, process and programme failures at the heart of the Brexit fiasco have their roots in the referendum. We conclude that the concept of policy deception contributes usefully to emerging work on why the Brexit policy fiasco occurred, and is likely to be a fruitful topic for future work.

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/33274/

Source: BURO EPrints