Results 191 to 200 of about 978,099 (313)
Sustainability of evidence-based policy engagement model: A case study of Advance Family Planning initiative in India. [PDF]
Shumayla S+5 more
europepmc +1 more source
Abstract While it is generally admitted that governments in most democracies make extensive use of public opinion research, we do not know much about the way they mobilize this resource. When and why do they want to learn about public opinion? What determines differences in the intensity of government polling over the electoral cycle?
ANJA DUROVIC, TINETTE SCHNATTERER
wiley +1 more source
Health technology assessment capacity to support Zambia's health benefits package reform policy. [PDF]
Simangolwa WM, Govender K, Mbonigaba J.
europepmc +1 more source
Do the origins of climate assemblies shape public reactions? Examining the impact of partisanship
Abstract Governments around the world are experimenting with deliberative mini‐publics as a means of integrating public input into policymaking processes, including as a method for directly creating policy. This raises the important question of when ordinary people will judge the outputs of mini‐publics to be legitimate and support their use.
ANTHONY KEVINS, JOSHUA ROBISON
wiley +1 more source
Book Review: Andrey A. Meleshevich, Party Systems in Post-Soviet Countries: A Comparative Study of Political Institutionalization in the Baltic States, Russia, and Ukraine. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007. £42.50 hbk, xvi + 262 pp. ISBN 1403974497 [PDF]
Allan Sikk
openalex +1 more source
Historical reconstruction of Latin American psychosomatic medicine: the exchange between psychoanalysts from Argentina and Brazil, 1942-1959. [PDF]
Guedes CR, Kaulino A.
europepmc +1 more source
Abstract Having long shied away from proactively politicizing issues of European integration, the past crisis decade has put generally pro‐European mainstream parties under pressure to spell out more clearly which kind of Europe they support. We distinguish two such fundamental ideas of Europe: the redistributive polity, organizing transnational ...
CHRISTIAN FREUDLSPERGER, MARTIN WEINRICH
wiley +1 more source
Abstract Coalition governments are said to make voters of coalition parties feel more warmly towards supporters of their coalition partners and, hence, reduce affective polarization. However, even countries frequently governed by coalitions commonly experience high levels of affective polarization.
JOCHEM VANAGT, MARKUS KOLLBERG
wiley +1 more source