L'analyse cognitive des politiques publiques : vers une sociologie politique de l'action publique. Muller, P. Revue française de science politique, 50(2):189–208, 2000.
L'analyse cognitive des politiques publiques : vers une sociologie politique de l'action publique [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
Cognitive policy analysis : towards a political sociology of public action While the analysis of policies has contributed spectacularly to a renewal of some fundamental political science issues, this renovation is meeting obstacles when seeking to answer one of the major perennial questions of political science : how is order "made" in a complex society ? To the extent that it considers the purpose of public policies to be no longer just to solve problems but to construct frameworks for the interpretation of the world, the cognitive approach to public policies can provide some answers. To shore up this hypothesis, one must first recall how policy analysis led to a break in studies of the state and the limits of that break, and then show that cognitive policy analysis makes it possible to remove these obstacles because it leads to a res-tatement of the difficult question of the relationship between actors and the structures of mea-ning. This makes it easier to take into account the global dimension of public action and thereby the impact of globalization on the transformation of the forms of public action.
@article{muller_analyse_2000,
	title = {L'analyse cognitive des politiques publiques : vers une sociologie politique de l'action publique},
	volume = {50},
	issn = {0035-2950},
	shorttitle = {L'analyse cognitive des politiques publiques},
	url = {https://www.persee.fr/doc/rfsp_0035-2950_2000_num_50_2_395464},
	doi = {10/bw8d68},
	abstract = {Cognitive policy analysis : towards a political sociology of public action While the analysis of policies has contributed spectacularly to a renewal of some fundamental political science issues, this renovation is meeting obstacles when seeking to answer one of the major perennial questions of political science : how is order "made" in a complex society ? To the extent that it considers the purpose of public policies to be no longer just to solve problems but to construct frameworks for the interpretation of the world, the cognitive approach to public policies can provide some answers. To shore up this hypothesis, one must first recall how policy analysis led to a break in studies of the state and the limits of that break, and then show that cognitive policy analysis makes it possible to remove these obstacles because it leads to a res-tatement of the difficult question of the relationship between actors and the structures of mea-ning. This makes it easier to take into account the global dimension of public action and thereby the impact of globalization on the transformation of the forms of public action.},
	language = {fr},
	number = {2},
	urldate = {2020-05-23},
	journal = {Revue française de science politique},
	author = {Muller, Pierre},
	year = {2000},
	pages = {189--208},
}

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