Shared Positions on Divisive Beliefs Explain Interorganizational Collaboration: Evidence from Climate Change Policy Subsystems in 11 CountriesShow others and affiliations
2023 (English)In: Journal of public administration research and theory, ISSN 1053-1858, E-ISSN 1477-9803, Vol. 33, no 3, p. 421-433Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]
Collaboration between public administration organizations and various stakeholders is often prescribed as a potential solution to the current complex problems of governance, such as climate change. According to the Advocacy Coalition Framework, shared beliefs are one of the most important drivers of collaboration. However, studies investigating the role of beliefs in collaboration show mixed results. Some argue that similarity of general normative and empirical policy beliefs elicits collaboration, while others focus on beliefs concerning policy instruments. Proposing a new divisive beliefs hypothesis, we suggest that agreeing on those beliefs over which there is substantial disagreement in the policy subsystem is what matters for collaboration. Testing our hypotheses using policy network analysis and data on climate policy subsystems in 11 countries (Australia, Brazil, the Czech Republic, Germany, Finland, Ireland, Japan, Korea, Portugal, Sweden, and Taiwan), we find belief similarity to be a stronger predictor of collaboration when the focus is divisive beliefs rather than normative and empirical policy beliefs or beliefs concerning policy instruments. This knowledge can be useful for managing collaborative governance networks because it helps to identify potential competing coalitions and to broker compromises between them.
Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
OXFORD UNIV PRESS , 2023. Vol. 33, no 3, p. 421-433
National Category
Public Administration Studies
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-187887DOI: 10.1093/jopart/muac031ISI: 000840414700001OAI: oai:DiVA.org:liu-187887DiVA, id: diva2:1691846
Note
Funding Agencies|Australia: The Social and Political Sciences Discipline, University of Technology Sydney; Brazil: The US National Science Foundation [1544589]; Brazilian Counsel of Technological and Scientific Development (CNPq) [CNPq 483099/20090]; Czech Republic: "Perspektivy evropske integrace v kontextu globalni politiky" [MUNI/A/1240/2021]; Germany: The US National Science Foundation [1544589]; Finland: Academy of Finland [332916, 298819]; Kone Foundation [201805496]; Ireland: The Structured PhD in Simulation Science, Programme for Research in Third Level Institutions (PRTLI) Cycle 5; European Regional Development Fund; Japan: Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [22243036, 15H03406, 18H00919, 21H0077]; South Korea: National Research Foundation (NRF) - Korean Government (Ministry of Education, MOE) [NRF-2008-220-B00013]; Taiwan: National Science Council of Taiwan [NSC 98-2621-M-002-022]; US National Science Foundation [0827006]
2022-08-312022-08-312023-11-28Bibliographically approved