Pepin-Neff coins the term 'Tolerable Inequality' to examine the ways in which politicians and political actors use the policy process as a tool to make inequality acceptable as a way of keeping power and avoiding penalties.
Pepin-Neff coins the term 'Tolerable Inequality' to examine the ways in which politicians and political actors use the policy process as a tool to make inequality acceptable as a way of keeping power and avoiding penalties.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Chris Pepin-Neff (they/them) is an Associate Professor of Public Policy at the University of Sydney. Their research interests include agenda-setting, emotions and public policy, and LGBTQ+ politics.
Inhaltsangabe
1. Tolerable Inequality and the Policy Process 2. Political Penalties and the Policy Process 3. Social Reactions and the Policy Process 4. LGBTQ+ Policy Entrepreneurship and Lobbying 5. Value-Acceptability and Gun Violence in the Policy Process 6. Intolerable Equality and the Future of Policy Evaluation
1. Tolerable Inequality and the Policy Process 2. Political Penalties and the Policy Process 3. Social Reactions and the Policy Process 4. LGBTQ+ Policy Entrepreneurship and Lobbying 5. Value-Acceptability and Gun Violence in the Policy Process 6. Intolerable Equality and the Future of Policy Evaluation
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