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![]() American Journal of Political ScienceVolume 51 Issue 3, Pages 532 - 551 Published Online: 19 Jun 2007 © 2010 Midwest Political Science Association Published on behalf of the Midwest Political Science Association
Abstract | References | Full Text: HTML, PDF (Size: 2798K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking Punctuating Which Equilibrium? Understanding Thermostatic Policy Dynamics in Pacific Northwest Forestry Benjamin Cashore is professor of environmental governance and political science, School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, Yale University, 230 Prospect Street, Room 206, New Haven, CT 06511–2104 (benjamin.cashore@yale.edu). Michael Howlett is Burnaby Mountain Professor, Department of Political Science, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada V5A 1S6 (howlett@sfu.ca). We are grateful to Gina Glaze for valuable research assistance and to Constance McDermott and Graeme Auld for their collaborations on related projects. For comments on drafts of this essay we thank Craig Thomas, Frank Baumgartner, Robert Repetto, anonymous reviewers, as well as participants in a panel held during the 2004 annual meeting of the American Political Science Association in Chicago. We are grateful to Grace Skogstad, Richard Simeon, Jeremy Wilson, Kent Weaver, George Hoberg, and Jeremy Rayner for insights on our earlier work. Financial support comes from the Canadian Eco-Research Tri-council, the Rockefeller Brother's Fund, the Merck Family Fund, the Ford Foundation, the USDA National Research Initiative, and the Canadian Embassy in Washington's Canadian Studies Grant Program. Copyright 2007, Midwest Political Science Association ABSTRACTA key theme among seminal contributions to policy studies, including Baumgartner and Jones (1993; 2002), Sabatier and Jenkins-Smith (1993), and Hall (1989; 1993), is that "external perturbations" outside of the policy subsystem, characterized by some type of societal upheaval, are critical for explaining the development of profound and durable policy changes which are otherwise prevented by institutional stability. We argue that these assumptions, while useful for assessing many cases of policy change, do not adequately capture historical patterns of forest policy development in the U.S. Pacific Northwest. Differences in policy development concerning state and federal regulation of private and public forest lands governing the same problem, region, and population challenge much of the prevailing orthodoxy on policy dynamics. To address this puzzle, we revisit and expand existing taxonomies identifying the levels and processes of change that policies undergo. This exercise reveals the existence of a "thermostatic" institutional setting governing policy development on federal lands that was absent in the institutions governing private lands. This thermostatic institutional arrangement contained durable policy objectives that required policy settings to undergo major change in order to maintain the institution's defining characteristics. Policy scientists need to distinguish such "hard institutions" that necessitate paradigmatic changes in policy settings from those that do not permit them. |
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Access this free virtual issue of Political Psychology that uses psychological theory and methods to explore important questions in political science. | |
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Political Psychology recently published a special Forum on David O. Sears' Ongoing Contribution to Political Psychology. Wiley-Blackwell is pleased to offer free online access to all the articles from this special journal issue. | |
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