Explaining Unintended and Unexpected Consequences of Policy Decisions: Comparing Three British Governments, 1959–74. 6, P. Public Administration, April, 2014.
Explaining Unintended and Unexpected Consequences of Policy Decisions: Comparing Three British Governments, 1959–74 [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
The vulnerability of policymaking to unintended and unanticipated consequences has been documented since Thucydides. Yet we still lack integrated conceptual and explanatory accounts of their variety and aetiology. Adequate consideration of putatively unintended and unanticipated consequences requires evidence about policymakers' prior intentions and anticipations, the factors affecting their cognition, and the forces bearing upon responses to attempted execution of policies. This study uses archival evidence about three post-war British governments to examine hypotheses derived from neo-Durkheimian institutional theory. It compares relationships between policymakers' informal social organization and their biases in framing anticipations and intentions in three policy fields. It shows that, contrary to widely made claims about a ‘law’ of unintended consequences, neither unintended nor unexpected consequences are random, but reflect basic patterns in variation and aetiology which the neo-Durkheimian theory explains well.
@article{6_explaining_2014,
	title = {Explaining {Unintended} and {Unexpected} {Consequences} of {Policy} {Decisions}: {Comparing} {Three} {British} {Governments}, 1959–74},
	copyright = {© 2014 John Wiley \& Sons Ltd},
	issn = {1467-9299},
	shorttitle = {Explaining {Unintended} and {Unexpected} {Consequences} of {Policy} {Decisions}},
	url = {http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/padm.12081/abstract},
	doi = {10.1111/padm.12081},
	abstract = {The vulnerability of policymaking to unintended and unanticipated consequences has been documented since Thucydides. Yet we still lack integrated conceptual and explanatory accounts of their variety and aetiology. Adequate consideration of putatively unintended and unanticipated consequences requires evidence about policymakers' prior intentions and anticipations, the factors affecting their cognition, and the forces bearing upon responses to attempted execution of policies. This study uses archival evidence about three post-war British governments to examine hypotheses derived from neo-Durkheimian institutional theory. It compares relationships between policymakers' informal social organization and their biases in framing anticipations and intentions in three policy fields. It shows that, contrary to widely made claims about a ‘law’ of unintended consequences, neither unintended nor unexpected consequences are random, but reflect basic patterns in variation and aetiology which the neo-Durkheimian theory explains well.},
	language = {en},
	urldate = {2014-04-28},
	journal = {Public Administration},
	author = {6, Perri},
	month = apr,
	year = {2014},
	pages = {n/a--n/a},
	file = {Snapshot:files/49004/abstract.html:text/html;Snapshot:files/49826/abstract.html:text/html;Snapshot:files/49828/abstract.html:text/html}
}

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