Policy design dynamics: fitting goals and instruments in transport infrastructure planning in NL (Van Geet, Lenferink) Flashcards
Why policy designs
Policies often have multiple goals and is a mix of several instruments and its effectiveness is defined by the fit of these goals and instruments.
policy designs develop by building on earlier design choices.
What are policy designs
Revolve around “the deliberate and conscious attempt to define policy goals and to connect them to the instruments”.
Old and new policy designs
Old: single instrument design, means to end understanding.
New: Views designs as interactive mix of goals and instruments, acknowledges the dynamic character of the mix)
When are policy designs considered coherent
coherent: if they relate to the same policy objectives and can be pursued at the same time without tradeoffs.
When are policy designs considered consistent
if they are mutually supportive and work together to achieve the same goal
when are policy designs considered congurent
if they serve corresponding purposes
five modes of change that make policy mixes evolve over time
- Layering (adding goals/instruments over time without replacing/adjusting existing elements)
- Drift (goals of policy change without changing instruments)
- conversion (Existing instrument is used differently in response to changed goals)
- replacement (new design elements put in place of old ones)
- exhaustion (breakdown or fading away rather than actual change)