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Book review: Policy Entrepreneurs and Strategies for Change: The Case of Water Management in the Netherlands

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dc.contributor.author Meissner, Richard
dc.date.accessioned 2018-03-14T12:58:03Z
dc.date.available 2018-03-14T12:58:03Z
dc.date.issued 2015-07
dc.identifier.citation Meissner, R. 2015. Book review: Policy Entrepreneurs and Strategies for Change: The Case of Water Management in the Netherlands. International Journal of Water Governance, vol. 3: 140-144 en_US
dc.identifier.issn 2211-4491
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10204/10103
dc.description Book review published in International Journal of Water Governance, vol. 3: 140-144 en_US
dc.description.abstract Stijn Brouwer’s study of policy entrepreneurs in the Dutch water sector is an excellent example of how an investigation into these political actors needs to be conducted. In this investigation the author was very thoughtful in how he defined policy entrepreneurs (pp. 3–8). The treatment of the theoretical dimensions of policy entrepreneurs and the strategies they can employ were also well developed and presented. The fact that Stijn investigates a number of policy process theories was for me an indication that he had investigated the subject matter from a solid theoretical foundation. I particularly enjoyed reading the theoretical section, since I am interested in the theoretical side of water governance and management. Stijn investigates four policy process theories: process streams and windows of opportunity, policy images and policy venues, the advocacy coalition framework and the network approach (pp. 22–32). He then goes on to indicate the ‘room for policy entrepreneurs’ in the four theories (pp. 33–34). What I also found interesting and a useful learning experience is the way Stijn treats these theories after he had outlined them. He revisits the four theories and distils, so to speak, 10 strategies from the theories. The 10 strategies are Stijn’s ‘new typology’ of policy entrepreneur strategies (pp. 54–64), under four categories: attention- and support-seeking strategies, linking strategies, relational management strategies and arena strategies (p. 64). I am not sure whether Stijn was mindful of the fact that he employed analytic eclecticism while elaborating on the 10 strategies that formed the foundation of his enquiry. Nevertheless, here the study scores top points in the application of analytic eclecticism in a well thought through and structured manner. Analytic eclecticism is not only the combination of theoretical frameworks, but the innovative integration of theoretical assumptions and helps us to understand complex social, political, environmental and psychological processes in governance (Katzenstein & Okawara, 2001–2002; Meissner, 2015) by avoiding the theoretical compartmentalisation of investigations into one theory (Sil & Katzenstein, 2010). The 10 strategies in Stijn’s new typology is an indication of this integration. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Baltzer Science Publishers en_US
dc.relation.ispartofseries Worklist;20481
dc.subject Water management en_US
dc.subject The Netherlands en_US
dc.title Book review: Policy Entrepreneurs and Strategies for Change: The Case of Water Management in the Netherlands en_US
dc.type Article en_US
dc.identifier.apacitation Meissner, R. (2015). Book review: Policy Entrepreneurs and Strategies for Change: The Case of Water Management in the Netherlands. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/10103 en_ZA
dc.identifier.chicagocitation Meissner, Richard "Book review: Policy Entrepreneurs and Strategies for Change: The Case of Water Management in the Netherlands." (2015) http://hdl.handle.net/10204/10103 en_ZA
dc.identifier.vancouvercitation Meissner R. Book review: Policy Entrepreneurs and Strategies for Change: The Case of Water Management in the Netherlands. 2015; http://hdl.handle.net/10204/10103. en_ZA
dc.identifier.ris TY - Article AU - Meissner, Richard AB - Stijn Brouwer’s study of policy entrepreneurs in the Dutch water sector is an excellent example of how an investigation into these political actors needs to be conducted. In this investigation the author was very thoughtful in how he defined policy entrepreneurs (pp. 3–8). The treatment of the theoretical dimensions of policy entrepreneurs and the strategies they can employ were also well developed and presented. The fact that Stijn investigates a number of policy process theories was for me an indication that he had investigated the subject matter from a solid theoretical foundation. I particularly enjoyed reading the theoretical section, since I am interested in the theoretical side of water governance and management. Stijn investigates four policy process theories: process streams and windows of opportunity, policy images and policy venues, the advocacy coalition framework and the network approach (pp. 22–32). He then goes on to indicate the ‘room for policy entrepreneurs’ in the four theories (pp. 33–34). What I also found interesting and a useful learning experience is the way Stijn treats these theories after he had outlined them. He revisits the four theories and distils, so to speak, 10 strategies from the theories. The 10 strategies are Stijn’s ‘new typology’ of policy entrepreneur strategies (pp. 54–64), under four categories: attention- and support-seeking strategies, linking strategies, relational management strategies and arena strategies (p. 64). I am not sure whether Stijn was mindful of the fact that he employed analytic eclecticism while elaborating on the 10 strategies that formed the foundation of his enquiry. Nevertheless, here the study scores top points in the application of analytic eclecticism in a well thought through and structured manner. Analytic eclecticism is not only the combination of theoretical frameworks, but the innovative integration of theoretical assumptions and helps us to understand complex social, political, environmental and psychological processes in governance (Katzenstein & Okawara, 2001–2002; Meissner, 2015) by avoiding the theoretical compartmentalisation of investigations into one theory (Sil & Katzenstein, 2010). The 10 strategies in Stijn’s new typology is an indication of this integration. DA - 2015-07 DB - ResearchSpace DP - CSIR KW - Water management KW - The Netherlands LK - https://researchspace.csir.co.za PY - 2015 SM - 2211-4491 T1 - Book review: Policy Entrepreneurs and Strategies for Change: The Case of Water Management in the Netherlands TI - Book review: Policy Entrepreneurs and Strategies for Change: The Case of Water Management in the Netherlands UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10204/10103 ER - en_ZA


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