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Who Decides Social Policy? Social Networks and the Political Economy of Social Policy in Latin America and the Caribbean. Latin American Development Forum. Washington, DC: Inter-American Development Bank, 2020. Figures, tables, abbreviations, notes, bil-biography, index, 183 pp. Download

Judzik, Darío

Latin American Politics and Society, 2021, Vol.63 (3), p.171-173 [Periódico revisado por pares]

Coral Gables: Cambridge University Press

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  • Título:
    Who Decides Social Policy? Social Networks and the Political Economy of Social Policy in Latin America and the Caribbean. Latin American Development Forum. Washington, DC: Inter-American Development Bank, 2020. Figures, tables, abbreviations, notes, bil-biography, index, 183 pp. Download
  • Autor: Judzik, Darío
  • Assuntos: Expenditures ; Nonfiction ; Pandemics ; Policy making ; Policy networks ; Political economy ; Political power ; Politics ; Public policy ; Social network analysis ; Social networks ; Social policy ; Social power
  • É parte de: Latin American Politics and Society, 2021, Vol.63 (3), p.171-173
  • Descrição: The authors remind us that a high impact of social policy needs funding is a necessary but not sufficient condition. [...]in this present era of pandemic recession and harder fiscal boundaries, if a higher impact of social policy is unfeasible through higher spending, then it must be attempted through the improvement of public policy. The other central element is who holds actual political power in social policy; in other words, which actors are at the top of the decisionmaking process—never mind formal or legal structures—and the origin of necessary resources. [...]the authors provide us with the notion that political economy analysis will help us learn who will have which ideas (and why), and social network analysis will help us understand the more or less efficient flow of these ideas to where actual decisionmaking power resides. [...]the analysis concludes that Argentina has an unstable, nonadaptable, incoherent, and uncoordinated social policy process, while in the other three countries one can find a more or less stable, adaptable, coherent, and coordinated process.
  • Editor: Coral Gables: Cambridge University Press
  • Idioma: Inglês

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