Political Decision-making (political + decision-making)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


PLANNING THROUGH EXCLUSIVE DIALOGUE: BASIC LESSONS WE CAN LEARN FROM THE PRIVATE ESTATE

ECONOMIC AFFAIRS, Issue 4 2005
Spencer Heath MacCallum
Empirical evidence suggests that private estates where land is managed as a multi-tenant property by a single private company with a continuing interest in the value of that property tend to be better run than estates that are subdivided into multiple parcels of separately managed land with the commons managed via some form of political decision-making. Public policy, particularly in the UK, has hindered the growth of successful multi-tenant private estates. [source]


Monitoring political decision-making and its impact in Austria

HEALTH ECONOMICS, Issue S1 2005
Adolf Stepan
Abstract The range of services provided by the Austrian health care system has been greatly extended over the last few decades. The accompanying measures for long-term care bring the situation closer to the ideal concept of a ,seamless web' between primary, secondary and tertiary care. Due to the expansion in services it has become increasingly difficult to ensure the balance between the financing and degree of usage of the services. The reiterated political aim has been to achieve balanced financing via legally fixed social health insurance (SHI) contributions and taxation. A steadily expanding part is contributed by the private sector. In the 1980s, measures for SHI expenditure containment were implemented; in 1997 a new hospital financing system based on flat rates was introduced. In order to guarantee hospital financing, the historical financing shares of the SHI for the hospitals were introduced in the form of valorised global budgets. The contradictory incentives arising from the flat rates and global budgets lead hospitals to shift services to the primary and tertiary care sector, causing additional expenditure for SHI. Currently, attempts are being made to secure the financing by increasing the SHI contribution rates and patients' co-payments. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Thinking about the Recent Past and the Future of the EU,

JCMS: JOURNAL OF COMMON MARKET STUDIES, Issue 2 2008
GEORGE TSEBELIS
After the referendums in France and the Netherlands, the European Union was in disarray. However, political elites in all countries were insisting in the adoption of the Treaty Establishing a Constitution for Europe, which in turn was a slight modification of the text adopted in the European Convention. The solution was found in the IGC of Brussels in 2007, where the substance of the Treaty was adopted, and symbolic details (flag, anthem) were dropped out. The article explains the impact of the institutions adopted in the Convention, and argues that these institutions would help political decision-making in the EU. It then explains how such significant results became possible (because of the important role of the Presidium in terms of agenda-setting). Finally it argues that the text of the Constitution became a focal point for all negotiating governments. This is why elites came back to it despite the public disapproval of the referendums. [source]


Rethinking the interface between ecology and society.

JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY, Issue 1 2008
The case of the cockle controversy in the Dutch Wadden Sea
Summary 1Applied ecology, like conservation research, may deal with societal issues if its scientifically based interventions have societal consequences. Human utilization plays a significant role in many ecosystems, so conservation ecologists often have to act on the interface between science and society, where controversies may arise. 2Using insights from science and technology studies, we have analysed the 15-year controversy on the ecological effects of cockle fishing in the Dutch Wadden Sea, which began around 1990 and involved nature protection and shellfish organizations, as well as several leading Dutch ecologists, in a heated debate. 3During this controversy, evaluative research on the ecological effects of cockle fishing was undertaken by a consortium of institutes in order to contribute to the process of political decision-making by the Dutch government on cockle fishery in this area. In addition to conservational and commercial interests, ecological research itself became part of the controversy. 4The research projects on the effects of cockle fishing during this controversy are examples of societally contextualized science, implying that interests and societal disputes are intertwined with scientific arguments. We have applied a dynamic model of contextualization in which societal stakes and scientific uncertainty are considered as the main factors determining the different contexts in which conservation research functions. 5Synthesis and applications. Conservation research, whether it is fundamental or managerially orientated, is related to greater societal aims and interests and might easily face more or less complex societally contextualized situations. Such situations imply extended responsibilities for scientists. Not only is there a need for sound science, but also for a sound way of interacting and communicating with the societal environment. Some elements of such a notion of extended accountability are presented. [source]


,Everybody's entitled to their own opinion': ideological dilemmas of liberal individualism and active citizenship,

JOURNAL OF COMMUNITY & APPLIED SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, Issue 2 2007
Susan Condor
Abstract Conversational interview accounts were used to explore everyday understandings of political participation on the part of young white adults in England. Analysis focussed on dilemmatic tensions within respondents' accounts between values of active citizenship and norms of liberal individualism. Respondents could represent community membership as engendering rights to political participation, whilst also arguing that identification with local or national community militates against the formulation of genuine personal attitudes and rational political judgement. Respondents could represent political participation as a civic responsibility, whilst also casting political campaigning as an illegitimate attempt to impose personal opinions on to others. Formal citizenship education did not appear to promote norms of political engagement but rather lent substance to the argument that political decision-making should be based on the rational application of technical knowledge rather than on public opinion or moral principle. In conclusion we question whether everyday understandings of responsible citizenship necessarily entail injunctions to political action. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Religion, Politics and Civic Education

JOURNAL OF PHILOSOPHY OF EDUCATION, Issue 1 2005
Robert Kunzman
The proper role and influence of religion in the public sphere continues to be contested and has important implications for civic education in a liberal democracy. Paul Weithman and Michael Perry argue that religion makes valuable contributions to civic participation and that religiously grounded beliefs should be fully welcome in political decision-making. In response, this paper strives for a middle ground of preparing citizens to engage thoughtfully with a wide range of moral perspectives, religious and otherwise, while promoting a civic virtue that still honours a commitment to public reason. [source]


Root Causes of Peacelessness and Approaches to Peace in Africa

PEACE & CHANGE, Issue 2 2000
Yash Tandon
Conflicts are endemic in society, but what is their specific nature in Africa, and why do they deteriorate into such intense violence as negates humanity itself? This article looks at the "mainstream" theorythat attempts to explain this, taking as example the UN secretary-general's recent report on the subject. The report is both partial and ideological; it seeks to hide the systemic causes of poverty and conflict in Africa. The role of the peace activist is to understand conflict in Africa from a holistic and systemic perspective. He or she must work at various levels to alleviateconflict and prevent its degeneration into violence, based on the dual strategy of partially de-linking Africa from the global system and developing tolerance towards interethnic and political differences. This approach requires a new kind of moral and political culture, and new structures of political decision-making and accountability that are locally accountable and diversified. [source]


Digging Deep for Justice: A Radical Re-imagination of the Artisanal Gold Mining Sector in Ghana

ANTIPODE, Issue 4 2009
Petra Tschakert
Abstract:, This article explores the concept of "contact zones" to counteract misrecognition and exclusion in the artisanal gold mining sector of Ghana. The large majority of the 300,000,500,000 Ghanaian artisanal miners work without an official license, illegally. Due to their encroachment on corporate concession lands, the use of toxic mercury in the gold extraction process, and the social disruption caused by their migratory activities, these miners are often marginalized and criminalized. Yet, devaluation and misrecognition hamper environmental stewardship and participation in political decision-making. Through parity-fostering participatory research, I propose a radical re-imagination of the sector that encourages agency and flourishing among these ostracized men and women diggers. [source]