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Studying compliance to uncover whether compliance is occurring, and
what motivates it, is central to the broader study of governance.
Contextualizing Compliance in the Public Sector: Individual
Motivations, Social Processes and Institutional Design develops an
interdisciplinary approach for answering a classic and essential
question in any rule-governed context: What factors influence the
decision of an individual or organization to comply (or not) with
governing rules? Analyzing compliance from an interdisciplinary and
multi-level perspective, this book examines the question of what
motivates compliance in the context of salient policy issues, such
as energy policy, water governance, police profiling, and drug
policy, among others. The book brings together an interdisciplinary
group of experts who explore the psychological, social, and
institutional factors that shape compliance with formal rules
embodied in laws and regulations and/or informal rules embodied in
social norms. In doing so, they offer a platform for assessing
individual compliance, compliance by or in the context of groups,
and compliance on a systemic or societal level. Contextualizing
Compliance in the Public Sector: Individual Motivations, Social
Processes and Institutional Designis an excellent resource for
researchers and scholars of public administration and public policy
conducting research on compliance, rules, behavior, and policy
outcomes.
Studying compliance to uncover whether compliance is occurring, and
what motivates it, is central to the broader study of governance.
Contextualizing Compliance in the Public Sector: Individual
Motivations, Social Processes and Institutional Design develops an
interdisciplinary approach for answering a classic and essential
question in any rule-governed context: What factors influence the
decision of an individual or organization to comply (or not) with
governing rules? Analyzing compliance from an interdisciplinary and
multi-level perspective, this book examines the question of what
motivates compliance in the context of salient policy issues, such
as energy policy, water governance, police profiling, and drug
policy, among others. The book brings together an interdisciplinary
group of experts who explore the psychological, social, and
institutional factors that shape compliance with formal rules
embodied in laws and regulations and/or informal rules embodied in
social norms. In doing so, they offer a platform for assessing
individual compliance, compliance by or in the context of groups,
and compliance on a systemic or societal level. Contextualizing
Compliance in the Public Sector: Individual Motivations, Social
Processes and Institutional Designis an excellent resource for
researchers and scholars of public administration and public policy
conducting research on compliance, rules, behavior, and policy
outcomes.
This book provides a comprehensive introduction to the
Institutional Grammar, an approach for analyzing the design of
institutions. To lay the foundation for the application of the
Grammar for different application areas, the book first provides a
background of the IG, before motivating the introduction of an
updated version of the Institutional Grammar, called the
Institutional Grammar 2.0 that aims at representing institutions
more comprehensively and with greater validity. The book then turns
to applications and introduces methodological guidance alongside
expositions of emerging analytical applications of the "Grammar"
that include presentations of current practice, as well as
developing novel analytical opportunities that the analyst can
apply or build upon for their application. This book is aimed at
students, faculty, and practitioners of diverse disciplinary
backgrounds with varying levels of understanding of institutional
analysis and experience conducting it.
There has been a surge in scholarship on policy design over the
last ten years, as scholars seek to understand and develop existing
concepts, theories, and methods engaged in the study of policy
design in the context of modern governance. This Element adds to
the current discourse on the study of policy design by (i)
presenting behavioral assumptions and structural features of policy
design; (ii) presenting a multi-level analytical framework for
organizing policy design research; (iii) highlighting the role of
policy compatibility and policy adaptability in influencing policy
efficacy; and (iv) presenting future research recommendations
relating to these topics.
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