iCal
Room:
Leipziger KUBUS | Hall 1A
Topic:
01 Frameworks for policy mix design and analysis: such as Ostrom’s Institutional Analysis and Development (IAD) framework, portfolio approaches, Pannell’s public-private benefits framework, functional role analysis of policy instruments, governance frameworks dealing with policy mixes or other innovative approaches
Form of presentation:
Oral
Duration:
90 Minutes
Chair: Christoph Schröter-Schlaack (Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research – UFZ, Germany)
03:40 pm
2911: Coolsaet, Brendan
Brendan Coolsaet | Centre for Philosophy of Law, Université catholique de Louvain | Belgium
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Authors:
Brendan Coolsaet | Centre for Philosophy of Law, Université catholique de Louvain | Belgium
Prof. Tom Dedeurwaerdere | Centre for Philosophy of Law, Université catholique de Louvain | Belgium
Dr. John Pitseys | Centre for Philosophy of Law, Université catholique de Louvain | Belgium
The implementation of the 2010 Nagoya Protocol can lead to two fundamentally different processes: a market-oriented self-regulatory approach or a normative institutionalist approach. This paper analyses the challenges related to the multi-level implementation of the Nagoya Protocol in the specific case of Belgium and evaluates how some governance patterns are favored at the expense of others.
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04:00 pm
2944: Howlett, Michael
Prof. Dr. Michael Howlett | Simon Fraser University | Canada
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Authors:
Dr. Pablo Del Río | CSIC | Spain
Prof. Dr. Michael Howlett | Simon Fraser University | Canada
This paper defines key types of policy mixes based on the complexity of design variables, including the number of goals, the number of policies and the number of levels of government and sector involved in the design of a policy bundle. The taxonomy is then used to assess the validity and applicability of oft-cited but under-theorized and under-examined portfolio design principles and precepts.
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04:25 pm
2950: Rayner, Jeremy
Prof. Dr. Jeremy Rayner | Johnson-Shoyama Graduate School of Public Policy | Canada
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Author:
Prof. Dr. Jeremy Rayner | Johnson-Shoyama Graduate School of Public Policy | Canada
Identifying when policies have changed (as opposed to when policy-makers would like us to think that they have changed) has never been easy. Identifying when policy mixes have changed is even more difficult, since quite dramatic change is achieved by altering the emphasis of elements in the policy mix. This paper tests a framework for identifying change in policy mixes using data from oil sand reclamation in Alberta, Canada over 50 years of policy development.
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