Institutions and the politics of agency in COVID-19 response: Federalism, executive power, and public health policy in Brazil, India, and the US

被引:9
|
作者
Greer, Scott L. [1 ]
Fonseca, Elize Massard [2 ]
Raj, Minakshi [3 ]
Willison, Charley E. [4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Michigan, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Hlth Management & Policy, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA
[2] Sao Paulo Sch Business Adm, Fundacao Getulio Vargas, Sao Paulo, Brazil
[3] Univ Illinois, Dept Kinesiol & Community Hlth, Champaign, IL USA
[4] Cornell Univ, Dept Publ & Ecosyst Hlth, Ithaca, NY 14853 USA
基金
巴西圣保罗研究基金会;
关键词
Federalism; Executive Power; Public Policy; Health Policy; Comparative Governance; COVID-19; SOCIAL-POLICY; DEMOCRACY;
D O I
10.1017/S0047279422000642
中图分类号
C93 [管理学]; D035 [国家行政管理]; D523 [行政管理]; D63 [国家行政管理];
学科分类号
12 ; 1201 ; 1202 ; 120202 ; 1204 ; 120401 ;
摘要
The COVID-19 pandemic of 2020 was one of the rare events that shocked almost every world government simultaneously, thus creating an unusual opportunity to understand how political institutions shape policy decisions. There have been many analyses of what governments did. We focus instead on what they could do, focusing on the institutional politics of agency - how institutions empower rather than how they constrain, and how they affect public policy decisions. We examine public health measures in the first wave (March-September 2020) in Brazil, India, and the U.S. to understand how the interplay of institutions in a complex federal context shaped COVID-19 policy-responses. We find similar patterns of concentrated federal executive agency with limited constraints. In each case, when federal leadership failed public health policy responses, federated, subnational states were left to compensate for these inefficiencies without necessary resources.
引用
收藏
页码:792 / 810
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Public Health Policy of India and COVID-19: Diagnosis and Prognosis of the Combating Response
    Gauttam, Priya
    Patel, Nitesh
    Singh, Bawa
    Kaur, Jaspal
    Chattu, Vijay Kumar
    Jakovljevic, Mihajlo
    [J]. SUSTAINABILITY, 2021, 13 (06)
  • [2] Public Health Workforce Burnout in the COVID-19 Response in the US
    Stone, Kahler W.
    Kintziger, Kristina W.
    Jagger, Meredith A.
    Horney, Jennifer A.
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH, 2021, 18 (08)
  • [3] Policy Solutions for Reversing the Color-blind Public Health Response to COVID-19 in the US
    Dowling, Marisa K.
    Kelly, Robin L.
    [J]. JAMA-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 2020, 324 (03): : 229 - 230
  • [4] Policy response to COVID-19 in Senegal: power, politics, and the choice of policy instruments
    Ridde, Valery
    Faye, Adama
    [J]. POLICY DESIGN AND PRACTICE, 2022, 5 (03) : 326 - 345
  • [6] Alignment and authority: Federalism, social policy, and COVID-19 response
    Greer, Scott L.
    Dubin, Kenneth A.
    Falkenbach, Michelle
    Jarman, Holly
    Trump, Benjamin D.
    [J]. HEALTH POLICY, 2023, 127 : 12 - 18
  • [7] COVID-19, public health, and the politics of prevention
    Mykhalovskiy, Eric
    French, Martin
    [J]. SOCIOLOGY OF HEALTH & ILLNESS, 2020, 42 (08) : O4 - O15
  • [8] Science, Policy, People, and Public Health: What Is COVID-19 Teaching Us?
    Krishnan, Anand
    Dasgupta, Rajib
    [J]. INDIAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 2020, 64 : 87 - 89
  • [9] COVID-19 Pandemic, Public Policy, and Institutions in India: Issues of Labour, Income, and Human Development
    Tripathi, Tulika
    [J]. PROGRESS IN DEVELOPMENT STUDIES, 2023, 23 (03) : 355 - 357
  • [10] US Community Pharmacies and Public Health-Building on the COVID-19 Response
    Layson-Wolf, Cherokee
    Sharfstein, Joshua M.
    [J]. JAMA HEALTH FORUM, 2023, 4 (06):