UNE APPROCHE INTERPRETATIVE DE LA GOUVERNANCE: INTENTIONNALITE, HISTORICITE ET REFLEXIVITE
In: Revue française de science politique, Band 63, Heft 3-4, S. 603-623
ISSN: 0035-2950
This article discusses the interpretive approach to governance. The interpretive approach comes from a hermeneutic philosophy, emphasizing intentionality, historicism, and reflexivity. These philosophical ideas decentre governance. The first wave of governance studies relied on a lukewarm positivism, extending the literature on policy networks to cover neoliberal reforms. This account of governance faced challenges from rational choice theory and from the idea of metagovernance. The interpretive approach responds to these challenges. The interpretive approach to governance responds to rational choice by decentring governance; patterns of governance arise as the products of meaning in action. The interpretive approach responds to metagovernance by decentring the state; the state is stateless. The article illustrates this interpretive approach, with its emphasis on intentionality and historicism, using stories of network governance. It then concludes by discussing the implications of the interpretive approach to governance for policy analysis. Interpretive theory encourages: a more eclectic approach to data, a suspicion of formal models and frameworks, and a greater role for storytelling. Adapted from the source document.