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Ideas, institutions, and interests: explaining policy divergence in fostering 'system innovations' towards sustainability
journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-07, 22:29 authored by Florian KernOver the last few years a fast growing literature developed around the notion of socio-technical transitions and the possibilities for governing 'system innovations' towards sustainability. Government policies are assumed to play an important role in such processes. However, an important critique has been not to see these transition processes as politically neutral, but to pay more attention to the politics of these processes. This paper makes a contribution towards this debate by analysing the underlying political processes and their institutional contexts which led to two quite different approaches aimed at promoting 'system innovations' in the UK and the Netherlands. The main question this paper answers is why the two governments engage with the same challenge in such different ways? Building on a discursive-institutionalist perspective based on the work of Hajer and Schmidt, the paper highlights the interplay of discourses, institutional contexts and interests in shaping policy initiatives to promote 'system innovations'. The paper concludes by suggesting a typology of possible relationships between these variables and expected policy outputs which helps to explain the two case studies and is believed to be applicable more widely.
History
Publication status
- Published
Journal
Environment and Planning C: Government and PolicyISSN
0263-774XPublisher
PionExternal DOI
Issue
6Volume
29Page range
1117-1134Department affiliated with
- SPRU - Science Policy Research Unit Publications
Full text available
- No
Peer reviewed?
- Yes