Working papers
Publications
CRC volumes
Oxford Handbook
  Deutsche Version  
   
 
Why Institutions Are Not the Only Thing That Matters: 25 Years of Health Care Reform in New Zealand
   
The literature on the causes of health care reform is dominated by institutionalist accounts, and political institutions are among the most prominent factors cited to explain why change takes place. However, institutionalist accounts have difficulty explaining both the timing and the content of reforms. By applying a range of explanatory approaches to a case study of health reform in New Zealand since the 1970s, this article explores some of the theories of reform beyond institutionalism, particularly those that take into account problem pressure, policy ideas, and the more agency-centered factor of partisan ideology. The aim is not to dismiss institutionalism but to try to fill some of the gaps that cannot be addressed with institutionalist theories alone. The detailed analysis shows that various factors played a role in conjunction, namely, problem pressure, policy ideas, and the ideology of parties in government. Partisan ideology, in particular, has perhaps been prematurely ignored by health care scholars.
Starke, Peter
2010
in: Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law 35:4, 487-516


 
 
   
  TopTop