Title of article
Comparative institutional response to economic policy managed competition and governmentality
Author/Authors
Donald W. Light، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Pages
16
From page
1151
To page
1166
Abstract
This article provides a comparative conceptual framework for understanding why so many governments found economic policies based on managed competition attractive and yet dangerous to implement. The framework conceptualizes governments as a kind of organizational complex and thus governments as an international population of organizations, each embedded in a state that tries to harness and direct behaviour through what Foucault called “governmentality”. This nascent concept is made more robust here and joined with Fligsteinʹs historical research on the response of leading organizations when fundamental change threatens a population of organizations, by embracing a new conception of control that allows them to re-establish their control and pre-eminence. Fligstein studied corporations, but his model can be fruitfully extended to governments. Economic sociology has not to date been able to do much comparative research on institutional responses to economic policy; but this set of case studies and conceptual framework provide such an opportunity.
Keywords
Comparative , Health economics , Economic sociology , Medical sociology , Foucault , Health care policy
Journal title
Social Science and Medicine
Serial Year
2001
Journal title
Social Science and Medicine
Record number
600674
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