posted on 2017-11-24, 10:08authored byLuca Bernardi, Laura Morales, Maarja Lühiste, Daniel Bischof
Under what conditions do critical events trigger large-scale public discussion and mobilisation, and can these lead to policy change? In a comparative study of nuclear energy policy after the Japanese Fukushima disaster in March 2011, a theory-development approach is adopted, mobilising data collected from national news agencies’ newswires, public surveys, legislation and parliamentary databases, and newspaper editorials in 12 established democracies between March 2011 and March 2013. The analysis suggests two main hypotheses that can guide future research: critical events are more likely to trigger policy change when intense (contentious) mobilisation from policy challengers aligns with the views of the general public, and is backed by major political allies; and critical events are more likely to trigger intense (contentious) mobilisation when policy challengers articulate their opposition around pre-existing policy debates on the issue and resort to pre-existing organisational and mobilisation resources.
Funding
The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Research Council through a Starting Grant [Grant Agreement 284277] to the ResponsiveGov Project (http://www.responsivegov.eu/), under the EU Seventh Framework Programme.
History
Citation
Environmental Politics, 2018, 27(1)
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCES, ARTS AND HUMANITIES/Department of Politics and International Relations