网络联系、机构角色和倡导策略:探讨对气候变化政策网络影响感知的解释

IF 2.9 2区 社会学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY
Paul M. Wagner , Petr Ocelík , Antti Gronow , Tuomas Ylä-Anttila , Luisa Schmidt , Ana Delicado
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引用次数: 1

摘要

一个政策参与者被其他人视为有影响力的程度可以塑造他们在政策过程中的角色。利益集团文献研究了游说或媒体宣传等宣传策略的使用如何影响演员的感知影响力。反过来,政策网络文献发现,网络联系和占据某些制度角色可以解释为什么行动者被认为有影响力。在调查是什么解释了对影响力的看法时,利益集团学者没有考虑到网络的相互依赖性,网络学者迄今为止也没有研究利益集团使用的倡导策略。本文通过调查网络关系、制度角色、倡导策略和气候变化政策网络中影响归因关系的存在之间的关系,来解决这两篇文献交叉点上的差距。指数随机图模型被应用于从六个欧盟国家参与国家气候变化决策过程的组织收集的网络数据,这些国家因其多数民主或协商一致的民主程度而不同:捷克、芬兰、德国、爱尔兰、葡萄牙和瑞典。研究结果表明,网络关系和制度角色比倡导策略更能预测影响力归因关系,并且在不同的制度背景下,倡导策略和影响力归因关系之间没有模式关系。这些发现表明,由于影响力主要与结构性因素(网络联系和机构角色)有关,更成熟的政策行为者可能具有更大的影响力,这可能会抑制气候政策重大步骤变化的必要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Network ties, institutional roles and advocacy tactics:Exploring explanations for perceptions of influence in climate change policy networks

The extent to which a policy actor is perceived as being influential by others can shape their role in a policy process. The interest group literature has examined how the use of advocacy tactics, such as lobbying or media campaigns, contributes to an actor’s perceived influence. The policy networks literature, in turn, has found that network ties and occupying certain institutional roles can explain why actors are perceived as influential. When investigating what explains perceptions of influence, interest groups scholars have not accounted for network interdependencies and network scholars have so far not examined the advocacy tactics used by interest groups. This paper addresses the gap at the intersection of these two literatures by investigating the relationship between network ties, institutional roles, advocacy tactics and the presence of influence attribution ties in climate change policy networks. Exponential random graph models are applied to network data collected from the organisations participating in the national climate change policymaking processes in six EU countries that vary by the extent to which they are majoritarian or consensual democracies: Czechia, Finland, Germany, Ireland, Portugal, and Sweden. The results show that network ties and institutional roles are better predictors of influence attribution ties than advocacy tactics and that there is no pattern in the relationship between advocacy tactics and influence attribution ties across different institutional contexts. These findings suggest that because influence is primarily associated with structural factors (network ties and institutional roles) that more established policy actors are likely to have more influence, which may inhibit the need for a significant step change in climate policies.

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来源期刊
Social Networks
Social Networks Multiple-
CiteScore
5.90
自引率
12.90%
发文量
118
期刊介绍: Social Networks is an interdisciplinary and international quarterly. It provides a common forum for representatives of anthropology, sociology, history, social psychology, political science, human geography, biology, economics, communications science and other disciplines who share an interest in the study of the empirical structure of social relations and associations that may be expressed in network form. It publishes both theoretical and substantive papers. Critical reviews of major theoretical or methodological approaches using the notion of networks in the analysis of social behaviour are also included, as are reviews of recent books dealing with social networks and social structure.
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