Collective learning and COVID-19 mitigation in Ghana
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Review of Policy Research
Abstract
COVID-19 has created significant uncertainty and disruption among governments and people acrossthe globe.
Policy studies present various theoretical frameworks
that allow scholars and practitioners to make sense of
these developments in a structured and systematic fashion. In this paper, we combined the collective learning
framework with documentary data and process tracing
analysis to describe, first, the features of the COVID-19
collective learning setting in Ghana. Next, we explored
the linkages among learning processes, learning products, and COVID-19 mitigation. We found that diverse
policy actors operated at distinct levels of government
and performed different functions in managing the pandemic. Furthermore, we confirmed all three phases of
learning (acquisition, translation, and dissemination)
in Ghana's context. Lastly, policies such as public grooming management, mandatory mask-wearing, partial
lockdown, and fiscal and tax reliefs enabled the government to mitigate the pandemic's impact on people. We
conclude by highlighting the implications of these findings for policy learning scholarship
Description
Research Article