ABSTRACT

A typical image of the making and administration of policy suggests that it takes place on an incremental basis, involving public servants, their ministers and, to a more limited extent, a variety of interest groups. Yet, much policy making is based on similar policy developed in other jurisdictions and in the major international organizations such as the WTO and the OECD. In other words, significant aspects of nationally developed policies are copied from elsewhere in what is described as a process of policy transfer and learning.

Hence, studies of policy transfer have pointed to a distinct limitation in most existing theoretical and empirical explanations as to how policy is made and implemented through their neglect of the role of policy transfer and learning. Moreover, policy transfer is not only a concern of academics, but a growing concern for governments. The latter are concerned to improve the performance of their policy and several have placed a greater, more systematic focus on policy transfer as a means to increasing performance.

This book presents a variety of cases from differing national and international contexts that enable a valuable, comparative analysis that is absent from most literature currently available and that suggest a number of exciting research directions with implications for policy making, transference and implementation in the future.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

part I|94 pages

Part I Degrees of transfer and their determinants

chapter 1|17 pages

When policy diffusion does not lead to policy transfer

Explaining resistance to international learning in public management reform

chapter 3|17 pages

Low Impact Development (LID): the transfer that was not?

How the federal relationship in the area of environmental protection facilitates innovation but mitigates against transfer

chapter 4|13 pages

Policy transfer in new democracies

Challenges for public administration

chapter 5|25 pages

Why can't you lead a horse to water and make it drink?

The learning oriented transfer of health sector decentralization reforms and bureaucratic interests in Malawi 1

part II|83 pages

New developments in transfer and learning

chapter 6|21 pages

Sources of transfer

The case of accession to international organizations

chapter 7|18 pages

Borrowing from the neighbours

Policy transfer to tackle climate change in the Australian federation

chapter 8|21 pages

‘These are the people you need to talk to'

The role of non-state organizations in international policy transfer to Ireland's Official Languages Act (2003)

chapter 9|21 pages

Contested policy transfer

When Chile's ‘Programa de Mejoramiento de la Gestión' travelled to Mexico 1

chapter |11 pages

Conclusion