Network policy making within the Turkish health sector : becoming collaborative / authored by Julinda Hoxha (Bilkent University, Turkey).
Material type: TextPublisher: Emerald Publishing Limited, Description: 1 online resource (168 pages)ISBN: 9781838670962Subject(s): Policy networks | Medical policy -- Turkey | Social Science -- Sociology -- General | Social theoryAdditional physical formats: No titleDDC classification: 320.6 LOC classification: H97.7 | .H69 2020Online resources: Click here to access onlineItem type | Current library | Call number | URL | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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eBook |
Digital Library
Resources in this library are accessible in digital format e.g. eBooks or eJournals accessible online. |
H97.7 .H69 2020 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Link to resource | Available |
Includes index.
Includes bibliographical references.
Prelims -- Chapter 1 : Introduction : extending the study of policy networks beyond their original context -- Chapter 2 : Setting the stage : an integrated framework for assessing network collaboration across country cases -- Chapter 3 : Tracing origins : the context of network formation in a least likely policy environment -- Chapter 4 : Becoming collaborative : policy networks within the Turkish health sector in Turkey -- Chapter 5 : Tackling the root causes : inherited structural and cultural barriers to policy collaboration in Turkey -- Chapter 6 : Conclusion : Leveraging networks to achieve policy collaboration.
The study of policy networks is usually undertaken in the context of advanced democracies. Turkey, a case with the least favourable conditions for collaborative governance due to its tradition statist policy making and authoritarian political culture, is an under researched area in terms of exploring the network type of policy collaboration as a phenomenon. This book presents findings produced by micro- and meso-level analysis of policy networks using the Turkish context as a new case study. While this study does not suggest that centralized and hierarchical decision-making structures within the government are being replaced with horizontal and networked forms of governance, it demonstrates that networks have become an integral part of the practice of policy making within the Turkish health sector. These findings compel scholars of Turkish politics to expand the policy realm with new issues, actors, instruments, and concepts, and incorporates Turkey into general governance debates. Going beyond the confines of Turkish politics, these findings contradict the recent arguments that call into question the utility of policy networks as analytical concepts that can be used to explain policy making processes. Policy networks observed in the Turkish case consolidate research regarding treating networks seriously in public administration and public policy research. This book will prove invaluable for researchers and leaders in the fields of public administration and public policy, particularly within the Turkish context.
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