If You Choose Not to Decide… Alaska's Budgeting Process in 2023
In: California journal of politics and policy, Band 16, Heft 1
ISSN: 1944-4370
In: California journal of politics and policy, Band 16, Heft 1
ISSN: 1944-4370
In: Peace & change: PC ; a journal of peace research, Band 49, Heft 2, S. 219-222
ISSN: 1468-0130
In: Law and the 100 Year Life (Abbe Gluck, Anne Alstott & Eugene Rusyn eds)
SSRN
In: Palgrave Companions
1. Introduction; Martin Coleman and Glenn Tiller -- I. Scepticism and Animal Faith -- 2. Santayana: Philosopher for the Twenty-First Century; Herman J. Saatkamp Jr -- 3. The Last Sceptic: Santayana, Descartes, and the External World; Douglas McDermid -- 4. Laying Siege to the Truth: Santayana's Discourse on Method; Diana B. Heney -- 5. Scepticism, Anti-scepticism, and Santayana's Singularity; Daniel Pinkas -- 6. Knowledge as a Leap of Faith; Jessica Wahman -- 7. Animal Faith and Its Object; John J. Stuhr -- 8. Natural Knowledge and Transcendental Criticism in Scepticism and Animal Faith; Paul Forster -- 9. Santayana's Naturalism at the Junction of Epistemology and Ontology; Ángel M. Faerna -- 10. Reconstruction from Ultimate Scepticism; Angus Kerr-Lawson -- II. Ontology and Spirit -- 11. The Centrality of the Imagination in Scepticism and Animal Faith; Richard Marc Rubin -- 12. Spiritual Exercises and Animal Faith; Martin A. Coleman -- 13. The Cries of Spirit: Santayana in Dialogue with Andrey Platonov; Matthew Caleb Flamm -- 14. Fumbling Towards the Animal in "Animal Faith"; Charles Padrón -- 15. A Tension at the Center of Santayana's Philosophy; Michael Hodges -- 16. Truth and Ontology; Glenn Tiller -- III. Philosophical Relations -- 17. On Gnats and Barnacles, or Some Similarities between Santayana's Idea of Change and Ancient Greek Thought; Andrés Tutor de Ureta -- 18. The Ideal of a Philosophic Redemption: Baruch Spinoza's Place in Western Philosophy and in Santayana's Thought; Lydia Amir -- 19. G. Santayana (Scepticism and Animal Faith, 1923) and E. Husserl (Cartesianische Meditationen, 1929), Readers of R. Descartes; Daniel Moreno -- 20. Hermes as an Interpreter and the Guide to Hades: Re-reading "The Letter of Lord Chandos" with Reference to Santayana's Scepticism and Animal Faith; Katarzyna Kremplewska -- 21. The Conservative Disposition in Santayana's Philosophy; Michael Brodrick.
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In: Futures: the journal of policy, planning and futures studies, Band 155, S. 103295
In: Journalism and Political Communication Unbound Series
Challenging the often-hyperbolic claims that have been made around the use of data in election campaigns for voter manipulation and suppression, this book provides unrivalled evidence of how parties actually behave. It shows that data-driven campaigning practice is not inherently problematic or new, but neither is it uniform, rather systemic, regulatory and party level factors affecting the nature of campaigning. Providing detailed empirical examples from Australia, Canada, Germany, the UK and US, this book shows how parties campaign and explains why parties differ, thereby resetting prevailing understanding of the role of data in campaigns.
In: Journalism and political communication unbound
In: Oxford scholarship online
In: Political Science
Challenging the often-hyperbolic claims that have been made around the use of data in election campaigns for voter manipulation and suppression, this book provides unrivalled evidence of how parties actually behave. It shows that data-driven campaigning practice is not inherently problematic or new, but neither is it uniform, rather systemic, regulatory and party level factors affecting the nature of campaigning. Providing detailed empirical examples from Australia, Canada, Germany, the UK and US, this book shows how parties campaign and explains why parties differ, thereby resetting prevailing understanding of the role of data in campaigns.
In: Journal of human trafficking, S. 1-16
ISSN: 2332-2713
In: Journal of human trafficking, S. 1-15
ISSN: 2332-2713
In: Public management review, S. 1-21
ISSN: 1471-9045
In: European political science: EPS
ISSN: 1682-0983
In: Policy sciences: integrating knowledge and practice to advance human dignity
ISSN: 1573-0891
AbstractThe media's central role in the policy process has long been recognised, with policy scholars noting the potential for news media to influence policy change. However, scholars have paid most attention to the news media as a conduit for the agendas, frames, and preferences of other policy actors. Recently, scholars have more closely examined media actors directly contributing to policy change. This paper presents a case study to argue that specific members of the media may display the additional skills and behaviours that characterise policy entrepreneurship. Our case study focuses on mandatory childhood vaccination in Australia, following the entrepreneurial actions of a deputy newspaper editor and her affiliated outlets. Mandatory childhood vaccination policies have grown in strength and number in recent years across the industrialised world in response to parents refusing to vaccinate their children. Australia's federal and state governments have been at the forefront of meeting vaccine refusal with harsh consequences; our case study demonstrates how media actors conceived and advanced these policies. The experiences, skills, attributes, and strategies of Sunday Telegraph Deputy Editor Claire Harvey facilitated her policy entrepreneurship, utilising many classic hallmarks from the literature and additional opportunities offered by her media role. Harvey also subverted the classic pathway of entrepreneurship, mobilising the public ahead of policymakers to force the latter's hand.
In: Science and public policy: journal of the Science Policy Foundation
ISSN: 1471-5430
Abstract
In democratic societies around the world, the number of science policy decisions is increasing. One of the fundamental principles of democracy is that citizens should be able to understand the issues before them. Using a 63-year cross-sectional US data set, we use confirmatory factor analysis to construct and test a two-dimensional measure of attitude to science and technology that has been relatively stable over the last six decades. Previous and current research tells us that only one in three US adults is scientifically literate, meaning that trust in scientific expertise is important to many citizens. We find that trust in scientific expertise polarized during the Trump administration. Using the same data set, we construct two structural equation models to determine the factors that predict positive attitudes toward science and technology. Comparing 2016 and 2020, we find that the Trump attacks on science did not reduce public support for science.
In: Computers and electronics in agriculture: COMPAG online ; an international journal, Band 219, S. 108765