Behavioural public policy has thus far been dominated by approaches
that are based on the premise that it is entirely legitimate for
policymakers to design policies that nudge or influence people to
avoid desires that may not be in their own self- interest. This
book argues, instead, for a liberal political economy that
radically departs from these paternalistic frameworks. Oliver
argues for a framework whereby those who impose no substantive
harms on others ought to be free of manipulative or coercive
interference. On this view, BPP does not seek to "correct" an
individual's conception of the desired life. This book is the third
in a trilogy of books by Adam Oliver on the origins and conceptual
foundations of BPP.
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