Part I - Dismantling Debates and Analytical Approaches
1: Andrew Jordan, Christoffer Green-Pedersen, and John Turnpenny:
Policy Dismantling: An Introduction
2: Michael W. Bauer and Christoph Knill: Understanding Policy
Dismantling: An Analytical Framework
Part II - The Dynamics of Policy Dismantling
Active Dismantling
3: Sophie Schmitt: Sequences of Active Policy Dismantling? Path
Dependency in Pension Reform Processes
4: Stefanie Korte and Helge Jörgens: Active Dismantling Under High
Institutional Constraints? Explaining the Bush Administration's
Attempts to Weaken US Air Pollution Control Policy
Dismantling by Default
5: Andrea Bianculli, Nicole Jenne, and Jacint Jordana: From
Dismantling by Default to Arena Shifting? Child Benefits Policy in
Spain
6: Christoffer Green-Pedersen, Flemming Juul Christiansen,
Eva-Maria Euchner, Carsten Jensen, and John Turnpenny: Dismantling
by Default? The Indexation of Social Benefits in Four Countries
Dismantling by Symbolic Action
7: Dominik Bernauer and Christoph Knill: When the Dismantling of an
Ineffective Policy Becomes Increasingly Costly: Default Strategies,
Arena-shifting and Symbolic Action in German Waste Policy
8: Andrew Jordan and John Turnpenny: From Dismantling by Default to
Symbolic Dismantling? Water Policy in the United Kingdom
Part III - Comparative Conclusions
9: Michael W. Bauer, Andrew Jordan, Christoffer Green-Pedersen and
Adrienne Héritier: Dismantling Public Policy: Preferences,
Strategies, and Effects
Part I - Dismantling Debates and Analytical Approaches
1: Andrew Jordan, Christoffer Green-Pedersen, and John Turnpenny:
Policy Dismantling: An Introduction
2: Michael W. Bauer and Christoph Knill: Understanding Policy
Dismantling: An Analytical Framework
Part II - The Dynamics of Policy Dismantling
Active Dismantling
3: Sophie Schmitt: Sequences of Active Policy Dismantling? Path
Dependency in Pension Reform Processes
4: Stefanie Korte and Helge Jörgens: Active Dismantling Under High
Institutional Constraints? Explaining the Bush Administration's
Attempts to Weaken US Air Pollution Control Policy
Dismantling by Default
5: Andrea Bianculli, Nicole Jenne, and Jacint Jordana: From
Dismantling by Default to Arena Shifting? Child Benefits Policy in
Spain
6: Christoffer Green-Pedersen, Flemming Juul Christiansen,
Eva-Maria Euchner, Carsten Jensen, and John Turnpenny: Dismantling
by Default? The Indexation of Social Benefits in Four Countries
Dismantling by Symbolic Action
7: Dominik Bernauer and Christoph Knill: When the Dismantling of an
Ineffective Policy Becomes Increasingly Costly: Default Strategies,
Arena-shifting and Symbolic Action in German Waste Policy
8: Andrew Jordan and John Turnpenny: From Dismantling by Default to
Symbolic Dismantling? Water Policy in the United Kingdom
Part III - Comparative Conclusions
9: Michael W. Bauer, Andrew Jordan, Christoffer Green-Pedersen and
Adrienne Héritier: Dismantling Public Policy: Preferences,
Strategies, and Effects
Michael W. Bauer works on issues of European and multilevel public
administration and is interested in comparative public policy
analysis in particular in the European Union. He is Professor of
Politics and Public Administration at the Humboldt-Universität zu
Berlin, Germany. Andrew Jordan is interested in the governance of
environmental problems in different context, but specially the
European Union. He is Professor of Environmental Politics in the
Tyndall
Centre for Climate Change Research, School of Environmental
Sciences, University of East Anglia, United Kingdom. Christoffer
Green-Pedersen has a long-time interest in the comparative politics
of welfare
state reforms. His recent research focuses on comparative political
agenda-setting. He is Professor of Public Policy at the Department
of Political Science, Aarhus University. Adrienne Héritier's
research extends to theories of institutional change in the
European Union, comparative public policy, European policy making,
Europeanization, regulation and new modes of governance. She is
Professor of political science in the Dept of Political and Social
Science and the Robert Schuman Center
for Advanced Studies, European University Institute, Florence.
`Policy dismantling is a subject which has been studied before but
only in a few countries and sectors and without ever arriving at
definitive conclusions about the forces, actions and patterns of
policy-making behaviour which result in or lead to this type of
policy change. This excellent collection of articles by leading
policy scholars moves this discussion forward through case study
and comparative analyses of instances of policy termination in
North
America and Europe. It distinguishes between cases of active
dismantling, largely symbolic terminations and 'dismantling by
default' when policies are simply allowed to lapse, and in so doing
helps to bring
order and clarity to this important aspect of public
policy-making.'
Michael Howlett, Burnaby Mountain Professor, Simon Fraser
University
`n this, the first book of its kind, a team of distinguished
scholars looks seriously at cases of policy retrenchment or
elimination. They find that political leaders find many benefits in
cutting, that social actors do not necessarily erupt in protest,
and that policies are indeed routinely dismantled in many
countries. The book charts a new course towards a theory of policy
change that would encompass both the creation of new programs as
well as the
elimination of old ones. One cannot have one without the other. And
we cannot have a theory of policy change without a theory of policy
elimination'
Frank R. Baumgartner, Distinguished Professor of Political Science,
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
`This is a terrific book about an extraordinarily important and
woefully under-theorized topic - when and how politicians try to
dismantle policies in place, and what determines their success or
failure in doing so. The authors provide a useful conceptual
framework for understanding the micro-foundations and strategic
options for dismantling as well as assessing its impact across
policy sectors. In addition, the rich case studies in Dismantling
Public
Policy make the volume "state of the art" in comparative policy
research. As austerity concerns become ever more central to
policymaking in western industrial societies, the analysis in this
volume will provide
theoretical and methodological guidance to researchers for years to
come.'
R. Kent Weaver, Georgetown University and the Brookings Institution
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