Results 81 to 90 of about 5,084 (213)
Powerful representation of the poor? German welfare associations' narrative advocacy during COVID‐19
Abstract The COVID‐19 pandemic sparked unprecedented experimentation in the German social assistance system, leading to changes previously considered impracticable by policymakers. This included a sanctions moratorium, easier access to benefits, and temporary cash transfers, all of which were advocated by welfare associations—key organized interests ...
Christopher Smith Ochoa
wiley +1 more source
Archivo histórico de Kipus: Revista Andina de Letras y Estudios Culturales, 1997.
Kipus Revista Andina de Letras y Estudios Culturales
doaj
Unveiling the multidimensional nature of policy acceptability: A cross‐national approach
Abstract Research on mass attitudes toward public policy often centers on preferences, yet the understudied facet of policy acceptability remains pivotal. This study develops and validates a nuanced measure of acceptability that identifies three dimensions: political, affective, and deliberative.
Matthew Jenkins, Daniel Gomez
wiley +1 more source
Narrative power in the narrative policy framework
Abstract The Narrative Policy Framework lacks clear and empirical explanations of power. Yet, the study of narratives is inherently the study of power in shaping policy outputs and decisions. We develop a conceptual model positing that expressions of power (power to, with, and over) may be discovered in narrative constructs (e.g., narrative structure ...
Elizabeth A. Shanahan +8 more
wiley +1 more source
Assessing the Effect of Deservingness Cues on Tolerance for Administrative Burdens
ABSTRACT Beneficiaries of public programs must overcome several administrative challenges. Given what we know about the politics of the welfare state, it seems likely that the public's willingness to support reductions in burdens may be associated with the characteristics of potential policy targets including their life circumstances and their race ...
Simon F. Haeder
wiley +1 more source
El presente artículo propone una relectura del herbario elaborado por el “médico” Martín De la Cruz, traducido al latín por Juan Badiano en 1552, y “el tratado médico” que forma parte del Códice Florentino de Bernandino de Sahagún (1577), a partir de la
Julio Vera Castañeda
doaj
Moralization in Policy Narratives: Insights From the Politics of Climate Change and Public Health
ABSTRACT In this study, we examine the process of moralization—defined as the use of moral values to mobilize support for or against policy proposals. Specifically, we investigate how political parties strategically employ moralization to influence policy processes, varying their approach depending on their political ideology and institutional position.
Simon Schaub, Jale Tosun, Maria Becker
wiley +1 more source
I think Plato Was Ill: The Cinema and Philosophy in End-of-life Issues
Marie de Hennezel, who introduced palliative care into France, referred to the end-of-life as a strong time; the time of final exchanges, of the last words.
Antonio Lastra
doaj
ABSTRACT We use grid‐group cultural theory (CT) to specify underspecified aspects of the Advocacy Coalition Framework (ACF). Our theoretical synthesis of CT and the ACF provides, first, an exhaustive typology of policy actors and their cultural cognitive biases that entail, guide, and constrain policy core beliefs about problem definitions and ...
Metodi Sotirov, Brendon Swedlow
wiley +1 more source

