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INFLUENCE POLICY (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   128743


Chinese climate-change policy, 1988-2013: moving on up / Stensdal, Iselin   Journal Article
Stensdal, Iselin Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract China's domestic climate-change policy has changed remarkably since 1988. In the late 1980s, the central government viewed climate change as a highly scientific, foreign affairs issue, and any policies were limited to scientific investigations. A mere decade later, climate change was seen as a developmental issue. By 2007 climate change had become a national priority. Since then, climate-change policies have expanded in measure and in scope. In this article I employ the advocacy coalition framework (ACF) to explain the policy changes. The ACF takes into account the overall sophistication of socioeconomic conditions in China as well as the climate-change advocacy coalition's communications and active use of their amassed knowledge to influence policy.
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2
ID:   120875


States in the customs house: institutional reforms and structural change in Mexican trade policy / Pezzola, Anthony   Journal Article
Pezzola, Anthony Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract How constituent interests influence policy outcomes depends on a country's political institutions. The examination of Mexican trade policy in two different institutional settings demonstrates that electoral systems influence who receives preferential treatment by politicians. Specifically, when electoral institutions make politicians beholden to territorially specific constituencies, the political clout of an industry stems from its importance within the political jurisdictions that it inhabits. The centrifugal influence of Mexican electoral reforms and the emergence of divided government increased the political salience of subnational economic interests. Where political clout once stemmed from an industry's importance in the national economy, the political clout of an industry now depends heavily on its importance to subnational economies.
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