{"title":"Embracing the politics of transformation: Policy action as “battle‐settlement events”","authors":"James Patterson, Matthew Paterson","doi":"10.1111/ropr.12627","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Societal transformations for addressing climate change are intensely contested and at risk of resistance and backlash to ambitious policy action. But they are frequently modeled through heuristics such as S‐curves which abstract from such conflicts, assuming increasing returns to scale as a driver of transformations. This is the case even while scholars accept the presence of political conflict in transformation processes. Within political science and allied disciplines, the notions of policy feedback and policy coalitions have been deployed to understand how such political conflicts may be understood. But these approaches risk gravitating toward an instrumental design impulse that inadvertently downplays conflict. We argue that policy action for societal transformations should be re‐conceptualized as an unfolding series of <jats:italic>battle‐settlement events</jats:italic> whereby heated episodic political struggles over a certain policy object or issue play out and eventually settle in ways that structure future debates while nonetheless remaining indeterminate and open to challenge or reversal. Such an approach reflects the varied empirical experiences of climate policy action to date which include both accumulation and reversal. It also helps explain trajectories of change that are discontinuous and lurching in contrast to common images of transformation as progressive and cumulative. We illustrate this approach through two cases of unfolding societal transformation on climate change: coal phaseout in the United Kingdom and renewable energy uptake in Australia.","PeriodicalId":47408,"journal":{"name":"Review of Policy Research","volume":"25 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":2.3000,"publicationDate":"2024-07-22","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Review of Policy Research","FirstCategoryId":"90","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1111/ropr.12627","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"POLITICAL SCIENCE","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Societal transformations for addressing climate change are intensely contested and at risk of resistance and backlash to ambitious policy action. But they are frequently modeled through heuristics such as S‐curves which abstract from such conflicts, assuming increasing returns to scale as a driver of transformations. This is the case even while scholars accept the presence of political conflict in transformation processes. Within political science and allied disciplines, the notions of policy feedback and policy coalitions have been deployed to understand how such political conflicts may be understood. But these approaches risk gravitating toward an instrumental design impulse that inadvertently downplays conflict. We argue that policy action for societal transformations should be re‐conceptualized as an unfolding series of battle‐settlement events whereby heated episodic political struggles over a certain policy object or issue play out and eventually settle in ways that structure future debates while nonetheless remaining indeterminate and open to challenge or reversal. Such an approach reflects the varied empirical experiences of climate policy action to date which include both accumulation and reversal. It also helps explain trajectories of change that are discontinuous and lurching in contrast to common images of transformation as progressive and cumulative. We illustrate this approach through two cases of unfolding societal transformation on climate change: coal phaseout in the United Kingdom and renewable energy uptake in Australia.
为应对气候变化而进行的社会变革存在着激烈的争议,并有可能对雄心勃勃的政策行动造成阻力和反弹。但是,人们经常通过诸如 S 曲线之类的启发式方法对其进行建模,这些方法对此类冲突进行了抽象,并假定规模收益递增是转型的驱动力。即使学者们承认转型过程中存在政治冲突,情况也是如此。在政治学和相关学科中,政策反馈和政策联盟的概念被用来理解如何理解此类政治冲突。但这些方法有可能倾向于工具性的设计冲动,无意中淡化了冲突。我们认为,应将社会转型的政策行动重新概念化为一系列不断展开的战斗--解决事件,在这些事件中,围绕某一政策对象或问题的激烈的偶发性政治斗争不断上演,并最终以某种方式平息,从而形成未来辩论的结构,但同时仍具有不确定性,可接受挑战或逆转。这种方法反映了迄今为止气候政策行动的各种经验,其中既有积累,也有逆转。它还有助于解释变化的轨迹,这种轨迹是不连续的、摇摆不定的,与通常所说的渐进式和累积式转变形成鲜明对比。我们通过两个关于气候变化的社会转型案例来说明这种方法:英国的煤炭淘汰和澳大利亚的可再生能源利用。
期刊介绍:
The Review of Policy Research (RPR) is an international peer-reviewed journal devoted to the publication of research and analysis examining the politics and policy of science and technology. These may include issues of science policy, environment, resource management, information networks, cultural industries, biotechnology, security and surveillance, privacy, globalization, education, research and innovation, development, intellectual property, health and demographics. The journal encompasses research and analysis on politics and the outcomes and consequences of policy change in domestic and comparative contexts.