Drawing practical lessons from punctuated equilibrium theory


Journal article


Chris Koski & Samuel Workman
Policy & Politics, 2018


Cite

Cite

APA   Click to copy
& Samuel Workman, C. K. (2018). Drawing practical lessons from punctuated equilibrium theory. Policy &Amp; Politics. https://doi.org/10.1332/030557318x15230061413778


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Samuel Workman, Chris Koski & “Drawing Practical Lessons from Punctuated Equilibrium Theory.” Policy & Politics (2018).


MLA   Click to copy
& Samuel Workman, Chris Koski. “Drawing Practical Lessons from Punctuated Equilibrium Theory.” Policy &Amp; Politics, 2018, doi:10.1332/030557318x15230061413778.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{chris2018a,
  title = {Drawing practical lessons from punctuated equilibrium theory},
  year = {2018},
  journal = {Policy & Politics},
  doi = {10.1332/030557318x15230061413778},
  author = {Workman, Chris Koski & Samuel}
}

Political organisations and policymakers contend with an ever-deepening sea of information regarding policy problems, constituent demands and solutions. Moreover, the problems confronted by modern governments are complex, multi-dimensional and boundary-spanning. This article leverages studies of national and subnational information processing and policy change to identify potential bottlenecks of information and patterns of policy feedback. We identify five lessons from this literature: two cautions and three suggestions. We caution that (1) centralisation does not solve problems of information search, instead, centralisation creates bottlenecks and (2) multiple venues offer more representation and opportunities for citizen influence, but suffer from attention limitations. Given these cautions, we suggest that (3) institutions be explicitly designed to be information-seeking, (4) issue bundling (grouping similar, interdependent issues together for the purpose of capturing attention) can prompt more holistic information searches, and (5) governments consider the correlation of information from subgovernments as policy information.

Share
Tools
Translate to