Interplay between Politics and Institution in Higher Education Reform
Abstract
The advent of the new economy brought university reforms to the limelight, and higher education research concentrated on the study of interactions of multi-level, multi-actor policy reforms, to the detriment of studying policy implementation. The ebbing of implementation analysis in the mid-1980s has probably put researchers off following up policies to the point of delivery, resulting in what critics dubbed a 'missing link'. Policymakers more pronounced need to evaluate the impact of the policies they adopt, inter alia, has led to a renewed interest in bottom-up implementation in other public policy fields, but not as much in higher education research. The article builds on a Network Governance-informed approach for studying policy reform in higher education and adapts it to study of policy implementation with a focus on transition systems. Witte's actor-centered new institutional framework is taken as a springboard, and some of its underlying assumptions are reviewed for that purpose, adding insights from public administration literature (NPM) and Lipsky's street-level bureaucracy (SLBy). Ultimately, it proposes a politics-institutions framework to account for the institutional change entailed to the reforms.
Keywords
References
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Details
Primary Language
English
Subjects
Studies on Education
Journal Section
Research Article
Authors
Saber Khelifi
*
This is me
Tunisia
Publication Date
July 15, 2019
Submission Date
February 4, 2019
Acceptance Date
April 6, 2019
Published in Issue
Year 1970 Volume: 8 Number: 3