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KNECHT, THOMAS (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   117554


Engaging the reluctant? service learning, interpersonal contact / Knecht, Thomas; Martinez, Lisa M   Journal Article
Knecht, Thomas Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
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2
ID:   087708


Pragmatic response to an unexpected constraint: problem representation in a complex humanitarian emergency / Knecht, Thomas   Journal Article
Knecht, Thomas Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract This paper elaborates a model of problem representation first presented by Billings and Hermann (1998). The foreign policy process begins when decision-makers specify policy goals and identify relevant constraints in response to a perceived problem. Although this initial problem representation often sets the course for subsequent policy, unanticipated constraints can arise that catch decision makers off-guard. Finding themselves in a context they did not anticipate to be in, decision makers may choose to alter their representation of the problem and/or change the course of policy. Billings and Hermann offer one piece of this puzzle by examining how decision makers re-represent problems; this paper provides the second piece by assessing how policies, not representations, change in response to new constraints. A case study of the U.S. response to the Ethiopian famine in the mid 1980s demonstrates that policy does not always follow problem representation.
Key Words United States  Ethopian Famine  Foreign Policy 
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