13: Is it rational? The rationalist approach in the design of health policies in Brazil, Colombia, and Mexico. Flamand, L. & González Arroyo, A. P. In Secchi, L. & Cruz-Rubio, C. N., editors, Handbook of Public Policy in Latin America., of Handbooks of Research on Public Policy series, pages 202–223. Edward Elgar Publishing, Cheltenham, UK, Northhampton, MA, USA, 2025.
13: Is it rational? The rationalist approach in the design of health policies in Brazil, Colombia, and Mexico [link]Paper  abstract   bibtex   
This chapter examines the evolution of the rationalist approach to public policy design in Latin America, which relies on facts, analysis, and systematic procedures to develop policy recommendations. It begins by outlining key elements of this approach, such as planning, cost–benefit analysis, and other methods of policy appraisal. The chapter then analyzes three cases: the creation of Brazil's Unified Health System in 1989, the use of a randomized trial to assess Mexico's Seguro Popular program in 2005, and reforms to Colombia's General System of Social Security in Health up to 2015. The analysis reveals that the rationalist approach is still rarely used in the region, even in technical areas like health, and is often complemented by the argumentative approach in the most successful and enduring reforms.
@incollection{flamand_13_2025,
	address = {Cheltenham, UK, Northhampton, MA, USA},
	series = {Handbooks of {Research} on {Public} {Policy} series},
	title = {13: {Is} it rational? {The} rationalist approach in the design of health policies in {Brazil}, {Colombia}, and {Mexico}},
	isbn = {978-1-03-531018-0},
	url = {https://doi.org/10.4337/9781035310197.00022},
	abstract = {This chapter examines the evolution of the rationalist approach to public policy design in Latin America, which relies on facts, analysis, and systematic procedures to develop policy recommendations. It begins by outlining key elements of this approach, such as planning, cost–benefit analysis, and other methods of policy appraisal. The chapter then analyzes three cases: the creation of Brazil's Unified Health System in 1989, the use of a randomized trial to assess Mexico's Seguro Popular program in 2005, and reforms to Colombia's General System of Social Security in Health up to 2015. The analysis reveals that the rationalist approach is still rarely used in the region, even in technical areas like health, and is often complemented by the argumentative approach in the most successful and enduring reforms.},
	language = {english},
	booktitle = {Handbook of {Public} {Policy} in {Latin} {America}.},
	publisher = {Edward Elgar Publishing},
	author = {Flamand, Laura and González Arroyo, Ana Paulina},
	editor = {Secchi, Leonardo and Cruz-Rubio, César Nicandro},
	year = {2025},
	pages = {202--223},
}

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