Results 301 to 310 of about 23,898,341 (340)
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Policy Paradigms and Policy Change

Policy Studies Journal, 1994
Canadian policy towards Aboriginal Peoples is a complex regime involving property rights, constitutional entitlements, cultural concerns, and interlocking administrative, social, economic, and political aims and goals. Recent events related to constitution‐making have led investigators to suggest that an old “assimilationist” paradigm established in ...
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Policy Change

2023
Allegra H. Fullerton   +1 more
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CLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION POLICIES

2011
In the previous chapter the focus has been on issues concerning adaptation to climate change. Key adaptation concepts and policies were introduced and potential adaptation responses in the case of developed and developing parts of the world were summarized.
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Policy Failure and Policy Change

Comparative Political Studies, 2006
The failure of a policy to achieve its goals is often an important reason for the decision to replace it. Failure alone, however, is rarely a sufficient explanation of the timing and direction of policy change. Change follows failure when alternative policies exist that are politically viable—that is, able to garner support from powerful actors—and ...
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Policy Regimes and Policy Change

Journal of Public Policy, 2000
The evolution of public policies in the United States has been characterized as a process involving long periods of stability followed by abrupt episodes of substantial change. In this project, we identify strands in the literature and synthesize policy theories into a policy regime model useful in explaining both stability and change.
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Policy Change

This chapter explores the racialized foundations of the United States criminal justice system, from slave patrols to mass incarceration. It critiques colorblind legal ideologies and highlights how punitive policies, especially during the War on Drugs, entrenched systemic inequities.
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Policy Making and Policy Changing

2009
Abstract This chapter explains the context which governs social policy and our role as interdisciplinary workers to be agents of social change. Policies grow out of the experience of our daily lives, which includes individual perspectives and values, family experiences, cultural history, and economic forces.
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