An Institutional Account of China's HIV/AIDS Policy Process from 1985 to 2010
Identifieur interne : 001F36 ( Main/Exploration ); précédent : 001F35; suivant : 001F37An Institutional Account of China's HIV/AIDS Policy Process from 1985 to 2010
Auteurs : Wenjue Lu KnutsenSource :
- Politics & Policy [ 1555-5623 ] ; 2012-02.
English descriptors
- Teeft :
- Aids conference, Aids patients, Aids policy, Aids policy process, Aids prevention, Anthony saich, Antiretroviral treatment program, Arthur kleinman, Beijing, Blood scandal, Blood stations, California press, Cambridge university press, Case study, China action plan, China ministry, China radio broadcasting, Chinese government, Chinese news, Commercial blood trade, Comprehensive understanding, Condom promotion, Contemporary china, Critical juncture, Deinstitutionalization, Disease control, Drug addicts, Drug users, Early policy, Ecological balance, Economic reform, Elite group, Emergency responses, Explanatory power, Februray, Fight aids, Former plasma donors, Former president jiang, Functional pressure, Harvard university asia center, Health approach, Health journal, Health minister, Health policy, Henan, Henan outbreak, Henan province, Historical institutionalism, Hong kong, Http, Huang, Human rights, Human rights approach, Idus, Illegal blood collection stations, Indigenous outbreak, Individual rights, Individual voices, Infection cases, Infection rate, Infectious disease, Infectious diseases, Institutional, Institutional change, Institutional diffusion, Institutional reproduction, Institutional theories, Institutional theory, Institutionalism, Institutionalism scholars, International journal, International society, Jiang, Joan kaufman, Joint assessment, Kathleen thelen, Kaufman, Kingdon, Knutsen, Knutsen policy, Legitimacy, Long stasis, Lower levels, Mahoney, Mass screening, Medical profession, Medicine ethics, Migration workers, Military hospitals, Moral legitimacy, Multiple factors, National health education institute, Nations programme, October, Opening policy window, Organizational fields, Outbreak, Oxford university press, Path dependence, Percent decrease, Phas, Policy approach, Policy change, Policy change theory, Policy development, Policy entrepreneurs, Policy goal, Policy makers, Policy process, Policy progress, Policy stasis, Policy window, Policy window theory, Political corruption, Political economies, Political interest groups, Political interests, Political legitimacy, Political positions, Political pressure, Political science, Political stream, Politics policy februray, Power distribution, Power reproduction mechanism, Power reproduction mechanisms, Pregnant women, Prevalence rate, Princeton university press, Public education, Public health, Public health outbreaks, Public security, Radical policy shift, Radical shift, Rapid spread, Reinstitutionalization, Reproduction, Reproduction mechanisms, Research questions, Respiratory syndrome, Roger detels, Royston greenwood, Rural residents, Sage publications, Saich, Sars, Sars crisis, Sars outbreak, Sexual behavior, Sexual promiscuity, Sexual relations, Similar policy issues, Small changes, Social policy, Social pressure, Socialist regime, Socioeconomic status, Sociological institutionalism, Spillover, Spillover effect, State council, States centers, Std, Streeck, Thelen, Theme group, Theoretical tool, Time frame, Time magazine, Tony saich, Toronto star, Transparency, Unaids, Unsanitary practices, Untg, Urban areas, Vice primer, Wang, Western ideology, Westview press, Wolfgang streeck, World bank, Xinhua news, Zhang.
Abstract
China's HIV/AIDS policy progress displays a long‐term stagnancy followed by a sudden revolution. This article utilizes multiple theoretical tools to interpret this policy progress. It identifies four phases of China's HIV/AIDS policy process: (1) institutional endurance interpreted by path dependence from historical institutionalism; (2) deinstitutionalization explained by Oliver's antecedents of deinstitutionalization; (3) the radical shift interpreted by Kingdon's agenda‐setting theory; and (4) reinstitutionalization and diffusion of institutional theory. This study demonstrates the utility of “creative borrowing”—employing multiple theoretical tools to harness the strengths of each. Doing so reveals that a country's past experience with similar policy issues, the perceived political and moral legitimacy of existing policies, and a country's existing political interests can exert resistance to change. In the presence of multiple pressures for change, policy entrepreneurs who can identify policy windows and couple multiple streams may achieve radical policy shifts. El progreso legislativo relacionado al VIH/SIDA en China muestra un estancamiento a largo plazo seguido de una revolución repentina. El objetivo de este estudio es utilizar múltiples herramientas teoréticas para interpretar este progreso legislativo. Se identifican cuatro fases en el progreso de la legislación china sobre el VIH/SIDA: (1) Resistencia Institucional, interpretada por la dependencia al modelo del institucionalismo histórico; (2) Desinstitucionalización, explicada por los antecedentes de desinstitucionalización de Oliver; (3) el Cambio Radical, interpretado por la teoría del establecimiento de agendas políticas de Kingdon, y (4) Reinstitucionalización y Difusión de la teoría institucional. Este estudio muestra la utilidad del “préstamos creativo”—el empleo de múltiples herramientas teóricas para aprovechar las fortalezas de cada una. Este estudio revela que experiencias pasadas con temas legislativos similares, la percepción de legitimidad política y moral de las políticas existentes, y los intereses políticos existentes en el país pueden ejercer una resistencia al cambio Dada la presencia de múltiples presiones para el cambio, emprendedores políticos que identifiquen oportunidades en las políticas y combinen múltiples enfoques pueden lograr cambios políticos radicales. Related Articles:“Civil Society and Immigrant Health Policy Convergence,” (2011): http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1747‐1346.2010.00283.x/abstract“The State, the Market, Economic Growth, and Poverty in China,” (2007): http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1747‐1346.2007.00088.x/abstract“The Search for Legitimacy in Asia,” (2010): http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1747‐1346.2010.00240.x/abstract
Url:
DOI: 10.1111/j.1747-1346.2011.00339.x
Affiliations:
Links toward previous steps (curation, corpus...)
- to stream Istex, to step Corpus: 000F59
- to stream Istex, to step Curation: 000F59
- to stream Istex, to step Checkpoint: 000647
- to stream Main, to step Merge: 001F60
- to stream Main, to step Curation: 001F36
Le document en format XML
<record><TEI wicri:istexFullTextTei="biblStruct"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title xml:lang="en">An Institutional Account of China's HIV/AIDS Policy Process from 1985 to 2010</title>
<author><name sortKey="Knutsen, Wenjue Lu" sort="Knutsen, Wenjue Lu" uniqKey="Knutsen W" first="Wenjue Lu" last="Knutsen">Wenjue Lu Knutsen</name>
</author>
</titleStmt>
<publicationStmt><idno type="wicri:source">ISTEX</idno>
<idno type="RBID">ISTEX:A1DDC85708F1DAE4C413DE0BE8537AE071B4D5EB</idno>
<date when="2012" year="2012">2012</date>
<idno type="doi">10.1111/j.1747-1346.2011.00339.x</idno>
<idno type="url">https://api.istex.fr/ark:/67375/WNG-X60961C3-P/fulltext.pdf</idno>
<idno type="wicri:Area/Istex/Corpus">000F59</idno>
<idno type="wicri:explorRef" wicri:stream="Istex" wicri:step="Corpus" wicri:corpus="ISTEX">000F59</idno>
<idno type="wicri:Area/Istex/Curation">000F59</idno>
<idno type="wicri:Area/Istex/Checkpoint">000647</idno>
<idno type="wicri:explorRef" wicri:stream="Istex" wicri:step="Checkpoint">000647</idno>
<idno type="wicri:doubleKey">1555-5623:2012:Knutsen W:an:institutional:account</idno>
<idno type="wicri:Area/Main/Merge">001F60</idno>
<idno type="wicri:Area/Main/Curation">001F36</idno>
<idno type="wicri:Area/Main/Exploration">001F36</idno>
</publicationStmt>
<sourceDesc><biblStruct><analytic><title level="a" type="main">An Institutional Account of China's HIV/AIDS Policy Process from 1985 to 2010</title>
<author><name sortKey="Knutsen, Wenjue Lu" sort="Knutsen, Wenjue Lu" uniqKey="Knutsen W" first="Wenjue Lu" last="Knutsen">Wenjue Lu Knutsen</name>
<affiliation><wicri:noCountry code="no comma">Queen's University</wicri:noCountry>
</affiliation>
</author>
</analytic>
<monogr></monogr>
<series><title level="j" type="main">Politics & Policy</title>
<title level="j" type="alt">POLITICS POLICY</title>
<idno type="ISSN">1555-5623</idno>
<idno type="eISSN">1747-1346</idno>
<imprint><biblScope unit="vol">40</biblScope>
<biblScope unit="issue">1</biblScope>
<biblScope unit="page" from="161">161</biblScope>
<biblScope unit="page" to="192">192</biblScope>
<biblScope unit="page-count">32</biblScope>
<publisher>Blackwell Publishing Inc</publisher>
<pubPlace>Malden, USA</pubPlace>
<date type="published" when="2012-02">2012-02</date>
</imprint>
<idno type="ISSN">1555-5623</idno>
</series>
</biblStruct>
</sourceDesc>
<seriesStmt><idno type="ISSN">1555-5623</idno>
</seriesStmt>
</fileDesc>
<profileDesc><textClass><keywords scheme="Teeft" xml:lang="en"><term>Aids conference</term>
<term>Aids patients</term>
<term>Aids policy</term>
<term>Aids policy process</term>
<term>Aids prevention</term>
<term>Anthony saich</term>
<term>Antiretroviral treatment program</term>
<term>Arthur kleinman</term>
<term>Beijing</term>
<term>Blood scandal</term>
<term>Blood stations</term>
<term>California press</term>
<term>Cambridge university press</term>
<term>Case study</term>
<term>China action plan</term>
<term>China ministry</term>
<term>China radio broadcasting</term>
<term>Chinese government</term>
<term>Chinese news</term>
<term>Commercial blood trade</term>
<term>Comprehensive understanding</term>
<term>Condom promotion</term>
<term>Contemporary china</term>
<term>Critical juncture</term>
<term>Deinstitutionalization</term>
<term>Disease control</term>
<term>Drug addicts</term>
<term>Drug users</term>
<term>Early policy</term>
<term>Ecological balance</term>
<term>Economic reform</term>
<term>Elite group</term>
<term>Emergency responses</term>
<term>Explanatory power</term>
<term>Februray</term>
<term>Fight aids</term>
<term>Former plasma donors</term>
<term>Former president jiang</term>
<term>Functional pressure</term>
<term>Harvard university asia center</term>
<term>Health approach</term>
<term>Health journal</term>
<term>Health minister</term>
<term>Health policy</term>
<term>Henan</term>
<term>Henan outbreak</term>
<term>Henan province</term>
<term>Historical institutionalism</term>
<term>Hong kong</term>
<term>Http</term>
<term>Huang</term>
<term>Human rights</term>
<term>Human rights approach</term>
<term>Idus</term>
<term>Illegal blood collection stations</term>
<term>Indigenous outbreak</term>
<term>Individual rights</term>
<term>Individual voices</term>
<term>Infection cases</term>
<term>Infection rate</term>
<term>Infectious disease</term>
<term>Infectious diseases</term>
<term>Institutional</term>
<term>Institutional change</term>
<term>Institutional diffusion</term>
<term>Institutional reproduction</term>
<term>Institutional theories</term>
<term>Institutional theory</term>
<term>Institutionalism</term>
<term>Institutionalism scholars</term>
<term>International journal</term>
<term>International society</term>
<term>Jiang</term>
<term>Joan kaufman</term>
<term>Joint assessment</term>
<term>Kathleen thelen</term>
<term>Kaufman</term>
<term>Kingdon</term>
<term>Knutsen</term>
<term>Knutsen policy</term>
<term>Legitimacy</term>
<term>Long stasis</term>
<term>Lower levels</term>
<term>Mahoney</term>
<term>Mass screening</term>
<term>Medical profession</term>
<term>Medicine ethics</term>
<term>Migration workers</term>
<term>Military hospitals</term>
<term>Moral legitimacy</term>
<term>Multiple factors</term>
<term>National health education institute</term>
<term>Nations programme</term>
<term>October</term>
<term>Opening policy window</term>
<term>Organizational fields</term>
<term>Outbreak</term>
<term>Oxford university press</term>
<term>Path dependence</term>
<term>Percent decrease</term>
<term>Phas</term>
<term>Policy approach</term>
<term>Policy change</term>
<term>Policy change theory</term>
<term>Policy development</term>
<term>Policy entrepreneurs</term>
<term>Policy goal</term>
<term>Policy makers</term>
<term>Policy process</term>
<term>Policy progress</term>
<term>Policy stasis</term>
<term>Policy window</term>
<term>Policy window theory</term>
<term>Political corruption</term>
<term>Political economies</term>
<term>Political interest groups</term>
<term>Political interests</term>
<term>Political legitimacy</term>
<term>Political positions</term>
<term>Political pressure</term>
<term>Political science</term>
<term>Political stream</term>
<term>Politics policy februray</term>
<term>Power distribution</term>
<term>Power reproduction mechanism</term>
<term>Power reproduction mechanisms</term>
<term>Pregnant women</term>
<term>Prevalence rate</term>
<term>Princeton university press</term>
<term>Public education</term>
<term>Public health</term>
<term>Public health outbreaks</term>
<term>Public security</term>
<term>Radical policy shift</term>
<term>Radical shift</term>
<term>Rapid spread</term>
<term>Reinstitutionalization</term>
<term>Reproduction</term>
<term>Reproduction mechanisms</term>
<term>Research questions</term>
<term>Respiratory syndrome</term>
<term>Roger detels</term>
<term>Royston greenwood</term>
<term>Rural residents</term>
<term>Sage publications</term>
<term>Saich</term>
<term>Sars</term>
<term>Sars crisis</term>
<term>Sars outbreak</term>
<term>Sexual behavior</term>
<term>Sexual promiscuity</term>
<term>Sexual relations</term>
<term>Similar policy issues</term>
<term>Small changes</term>
<term>Social policy</term>
<term>Social pressure</term>
<term>Socialist regime</term>
<term>Socioeconomic status</term>
<term>Sociological institutionalism</term>
<term>Spillover</term>
<term>Spillover effect</term>
<term>State council</term>
<term>States centers</term>
<term>Std</term>
<term>Streeck</term>
<term>Thelen</term>
<term>Theme group</term>
<term>Theoretical tool</term>
<term>Time frame</term>
<term>Time magazine</term>
<term>Tony saich</term>
<term>Toronto star</term>
<term>Transparency</term>
<term>Unaids</term>
<term>Unsanitary practices</term>
<term>Untg</term>
<term>Urban areas</term>
<term>Vice primer</term>
<term>Wang</term>
<term>Western ideology</term>
<term>Westview press</term>
<term>Wolfgang streeck</term>
<term>World bank</term>
<term>Xinhua news</term>
<term>Zhang</term>
</keywords>
</textClass>
</profileDesc>
</teiHeader>
<front><div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">China's HIV/AIDS policy progress displays a long‐term stagnancy followed by a sudden revolution. This article utilizes multiple theoretical tools to interpret this policy progress. It identifies four phases of China's HIV/AIDS policy process: (1) institutional endurance interpreted by path dependence from historical institutionalism; (2) deinstitutionalization explained by Oliver's antecedents of deinstitutionalization; (3) the radical shift interpreted by Kingdon's agenda‐setting theory; and (4) reinstitutionalization and diffusion of institutional theory. This study demonstrates the utility of “creative borrowing”—employing multiple theoretical tools to harness the strengths of each. Doing so reveals that a country's past experience with similar policy issues, the perceived political and moral legitimacy of existing policies, and a country's existing political interests can exert resistance to change. In the presence of multiple pressures for change, policy entrepreneurs who can identify policy windows and couple multiple streams may achieve radical policy shifts. El progreso legislativo relacionado al VIH/SIDA en China muestra un estancamiento a largo plazo seguido de una revolución repentina. El objetivo de este estudio es utilizar múltiples herramientas teoréticas para interpretar este progreso legislativo. Se identifican cuatro fases en el progreso de la legislación china sobre el VIH/SIDA: (1) Resistencia Institucional, interpretada por la dependencia al modelo del institucionalismo histórico; (2) Desinstitucionalización, explicada por los antecedentes de desinstitucionalización de Oliver; (3) el Cambio Radical, interpretado por la teoría del establecimiento de agendas políticas de Kingdon, y (4) Reinstitucionalización y Difusión de la teoría institucional. Este estudio muestra la utilidad del “préstamos creativo”—el empleo de múltiples herramientas teóricas para aprovechar las fortalezas de cada una. Este estudio revela que experiencias pasadas con temas legislativos similares, la percepción de legitimidad política y moral de las políticas existentes, y los intereses políticos existentes en el país pueden ejercer una resistencia al cambio Dada la presencia de múltiples presiones para el cambio, emprendedores políticos que identifiquen oportunidades en las políticas y combinen múltiples enfoques pueden lograr cambios políticos radicales. Related Articles:“Civil Society and Immigrant Health Policy Convergence,” (2011): http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1747‐1346.2010.00283.x/abstract“The State, the Market, Economic Growth, and Poverty in China,” (2007): http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1747‐1346.2007.00088.x/abstract“The Search for Legitimacy in Asia,” (2010): http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1747‐1346.2010.00240.x/abstract</div>
</front>
</TEI>
<affiliations><list></list>
<tree><noCountry><name sortKey="Knutsen, Wenjue Lu" sort="Knutsen, Wenjue Lu" uniqKey="Knutsen W" first="Wenjue Lu" last="Knutsen">Wenjue Lu Knutsen</name>
</noCountry>
</tree>
</affiliations>
</record>
Pour manipuler ce document sous Unix (Dilib)
EXPLOR_STEP=$WICRI_ROOT/Sante/explor/SrasV1/Data/Main/Exploration
HfdSelect -h $EXPLOR_STEP/biblio.hfd -nk 001F36 | SxmlIndent | more
Ou
HfdSelect -h $EXPLOR_AREA/Data/Main/Exploration/biblio.hfd -nk 001F36 | SxmlIndent | more
Pour mettre un lien sur cette page dans le réseau Wicri
{{Explor lien |wiki= Sante |area= SrasV1 |flux= Main |étape= Exploration |type= RBID |clé= ISTEX:A1DDC85708F1DAE4C413DE0BE8537AE071B4D5EB |texte= An Institutional Account of China's HIV/AIDS Policy Process from 1985 to 2010 }}
This area was generated with Dilib version V0.6.33. |