Scales of ideational policy influence: A multi-level, actor centric, and institutionalist perspective on the role of ideas in African social policy
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Journal of International and Comparative Social Policy
Abstract
Although there is a growing literature on transnational ideational processes in sub-Saharan Africa, the
linkages between local, national, and transnational actors and ideas in African social policy would gain from
more systematic mapping. In this paper, we explore what we call the “scales of ideational policy influence” by
sketching a multi-level, actor-centric, and institutionalist perspective on ideational policy influence at the
local, national, and transnational scales. This discussion leads to analysis of how these scales interact in terms
of specific ideas and how both governmental and non-governmental actors seek to impact social policy
decisions in sub-Saharan Africa. To illustrate the three scales of ideational influence and their interaction,
the paper turns to the making of poverty reduction policies in Ghana. We show how policy ideas move from
the global level to a national and subnational level using ideational mechanisms aided by the institutional
position of actors and material factors
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Research Article