1. Addressing Methodological Challenges in Studying Norms in the Policy Process.
- Author
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Raymond, Leigh
- Subjects
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SOCIAL norms , *POLITICAL planning , *GOVERNMENT policy , *CONTENT analysis , *SELF-interest - Abstract
This paper asks how researchers can better measure and operationalize social norms as variables in theories of the policy process. As standards of appropriate behavior for a given identity, norms are a distinctive and powerful type of idea relevant to many public policy contexts, but have received relatively little attention among policy theorists. This omission may be partly due to methodological difficulties. Measuring the presence of norms in a given political setting through surveys or interviews can be challenging given the "taken for granted" nature of many norm-based beliefs (Elster 2007). Documenting the causal relationship between a norm and a particular policy choice can be even more challenging (Campbell 2004; Finnemore and Sikkink 1998; Yee 1996). This paper discusses the strengths and weaknesses of different methods for studying the political influence of norms, including interviews, surveys, experiments, content analysis, and QCA. The paper pays close attention to the challenge of distinguishing norm-driven behavior from behavior driven by self-interest, as well as the relationship between normative ideas and normative rhetoric (Finlayson 2004; Raymond and Olive 2009). ..PAT.-Unpublished Manuscript [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009