par Taffoni, Gaia;Esposito, Giovanni ;Terlizzi, Andrea; [et al.]
Référence Conference on Policy Process Research (23: 11-14 janvier, 2023: Denver, Etats-Unis - Colorado)
Publication Non publié, 2023
Référence Conference on Policy Process Research (23: 11-14 janvier, 2023: Denver, Etats-Unis - Colorado)
Publication Non publié, 2023
Communication à un colloque
Résumé : | Among the public management and policy scholars’ community the unifying theme of strategic behavior as part of collective action has gained momentum. Specifically, explanations for collective action focus on both institutional arrangements and narratives, conceived as means that shape the practices of policy actors. Therefore, when reasoning about what drives collective action, scholars may refer to at least two separate but interrelated analytical frameworks. On the one hand, approaches focusing on institutional designs emphasize the role of rules-in-use to guide human behavior. On the other hand, accounting for the different discursive practices through which policy actors narrate and make sense of their institutional actions helps understanding actors’ strategic behavior. However, examining institutional and narrative approaches together is daunting, in part because there has not been a common way to incorporate the two approaches in a comparative way. In this article, we investigate how policy-makers strategically use narratives and institutional arrangements to establish relational connections between governmental and non-governmental actors in the empirical settings of an innovation policy process. We draw from assemblage thinking and Actor-Network Theory (ANT) in order to elaborate a novel analytical approach that combines ANT with the Institutional Grammar Tool (IGT) and the Narrative Policy Framework (NPF). According to ANT, any innovation is the result of a translation process through which a network of actors is created, and different interests, goals, desires, visions, and beliefs are gathered together. We use IGT and NPF as analytical categories in a processual perspective to examine how actors narrate institutional statements within the process through which multiple heterogeneous components (humans and non-humans) are assembled to create governable forms. In bringing together ANT, the IGT and the NPF, we shed new light on the study of strategic behavior in complex policy environments. We illustrate our approach through an in-depth analysis of the development of a smart city, namely, an ICT-enabled policy innovation made in urban settings. |