Implementing and Designing Interactive Governance Arenas: A Top-Down Governance Perspective
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.58235/sjpa.v21i3.11569Keywords:
Implementation, Institutional design, Mandated governance areas, Interactive governance, Cross-sector collaborationAbstract
Mandating interactive governance arenas presents itself as an appealing strategy for deter- mined public policy-makers at the frontier of New Public Governance. However, it also confronts researchers and practitioners with a new set of policy execution problems which prompts re-examination of one of the oldest research questions in public administration research: how and why are the high hopes of central policy-makers (not) translated into practice? Through combining insights from the public policy implementation literature, network governance literature and theories of multi-actor institutional design, the article develops a theoretical perspective for studying top-down implementation of interactive governance arenas. The developed perspective enables researchers and practitioners to identify a number of critical junctions in the implementation process with important impli- cations for the final design of the interactive arenas. A longitudinal case-analysis of the implementation of ten Local Crime Prevention Councils in one of twelve Danish police districts is conducted to demonstrate how the perspective may be deployed in empirical studies.
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