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Underastanding the Policymaking Process in Developing Countries

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Understanding the Policymaking Process in Developing Countries provides a uniquely comprehensive and practical framework for development practitioners, policymakers, activists, and students to diagnose and improve policy processes in developing countries across a wide range of issues. Based on the classic policy sciences approach, the book offers over 100 diagnostic indicators keyed to identify problems of policy processes, policy content, bureaucratic behavior, stakeholder behavior, and national-subnational interactions. This multi-disciplinary framework is applied to a host of policy problems that particularly plague countries experiencing the 'under-development syndrome', including aborted programs and projects, policy impasses, distorted implementation, unnecessary harm and conflict, and shortsighted initiatives. These points are illustrated through cases from Africa, Asia, and Latin America. Based on the developing countries' distinctive challenges, the book also offers recommendations on improving policy content and institutions to address the typical limitations.

. Provides clear applications of a powerful policy sciences framework to understand the problems and potential solutions of the policy processes in developing countries

. Proposes a comprehensive set of indicators to diagnose decision-process problems

. Includes many examples from all developing regions, covering a wide range of policy issues

Author: Louis Ascher William
Publisher: CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
Pages: 252
ISBN: 9781108405515
Cover: Paperback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2017

1. Challenges to effective development policymaking

2. The policy process in developing countries really is different

3. The expert's risk: endorsing ill-fated initiatives

4. The expert's frustration: rejection of sound knowledge or recommendations

5. Overcoming the impasses that block sound initiatives

6. Inconsistent or incomplete enactment of initiatives

7. Inadequate accommodation for excessive deprivation

8. Reducing avoidable conflict

9. Minimizing shortsighted policies

10. Adapting policy initiatives and institutions

11. Conclusions.

William Ascher is Professor of Government and Economics at Claremont McKenna College, California. He has authored or edited nineteen books on political economy of development, natural resource and environmental policy, political psychology, forecasting methodology, physical infrastructure policy and conflict-sensitive development. Ascher has twice won the Harold D. Lasswell Prize for best article in Policy Sciences and his book Bringing in the Future (2009) won the International Political Science Association's Levine Prize for the best public policy book of 2009. He has worked with the World Bank, USAID, the EPA, directed the Duke Center for International Development, and served as Dean of the Faculty at Claremont McKenna College.

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