Advancing scholarship on policy conflict through perspectives from oil and gas policy actors

被引:0
|
作者
Jennifer A. Kagan
Tanya Heikkila
Christopher M. Weible
Duncan Gilchrist
Ramiro Berardo
Hongtao Yi
机构
[1] University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa,College of Social Sciences
[2] University of Colorado Denver,School of Public Affairs
[3] The Nature Conservancy,School of Environment and Natural Resources
[4] The Ohio State University,John Glenn College of Public Affairs
[5] The Ohio State University,undefined
来源
Policy Sciences | 2023年 / 56卷
关键词
Policy conflict framework; Oil and gas policy; Policy narratives; Advocacy coalitions; Policy feedback;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
While receiving more attention in the policy sciences in recent years, much remains unknown about policy conflicts. This research analyzes 48 in-depth qualitative interviews of people involved in, or familiar with, conflicts associated with shale oil and gas (aka “fracking”) policy proposals and decisions across 15 U.S. states. We ask the question: how do policy actors characterize policy conflicts? To guide interviews and data collection for this study, we rely on the Policy Conflict Framework (PCF). The PCF highlights how policy settings serve as the sources of conflict; the characteristics of policy conflict across settings, between policy actors, and over time; and the varying outcomes. Insights derived from interviews include that policy conflicts are far more complicated to portray than depicted in the literature, individuals shape and understand conflict through emotions and narratives, any descriptions of policy conflicts must account for time and their evolutionary nature, and conflicts involve diverse strategies of winning and mitigation. The conclusion links these findings to the literature to advance knowledge about policy conflict.
引用
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页码:573 / 594
页数:21
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