2019
DOI: 10.1080/25741292.2019.1678232
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Policy design dynamics: fitting goals and instruments in transport infrastructure planning in the Netherlands

Abstract: A policy design is a dynamic mix of goals and instruments that develop over time through processes of layering, drift, conversion, replacement and exhaustion. In the face of these dynamics, it is a key concern for policy designers to maintain fit between policy design elements by sustaining goal coherence, instrument consistency and the congruence of goals and instruments. Even though the temporal aspect is fundamental to new policy design thinking, few studies have dealt with the interrelation between policy … Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…Congruence, finally, reflects the extent to which policy goals and means are mutually supportive and successful at working together to achieve corresponding goals (Kern & Howlett, 2009). The sum of goal coherence, mean consistency, and congruence of goals and means, may be described as policy design fit (van Geet et al, 2019b).…”
Section: A Multilevel Approach To Policy Designmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…Congruence, finally, reflects the extent to which policy goals and means are mutually supportive and successful at working together to achieve corresponding goals (Kern & Howlett, 2009). The sum of goal coherence, mean consistency, and congruence of goals and means, may be described as policy design fit (van Geet et al, 2019b).…”
Section: A Multilevel Approach To Policy Designmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Policy design fit is a dynamic concept; policy design components develop over time, through processes of layering, drift, conversion, replacement, and exhaustion (Kern & Howlett, 2009;Rayner, et al, 2017;van Geet et al, 2019b). It is important to take into account these processes of change as they will impact the fit of policy design components (van Geet et al, 2019b). Cashore and Howlett (2007) provide useful insight on how processes of policy design change unfold between goals and means across different policy levels.…”
Section: A Multilevel Approach To Policy Designmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The second group is policy instruments which aim to span boundaries between the land use and transport domains and to encourage integration processes throughout the policy process (Marsden & Reardon, 2017;Mu & de Jong, 2016;Tornberg & Odhage, 2018; van Geet, Lenferink, & Leendertse, 2019). The LUTI literature describes several examples of such procedural policy instruments, e.g., establishing cross-departmental working groups (Jones & Lucas, 2000), introducing cross-departmental budgeting schemes (Macario, Caravalho, & Fermisson, 2005;Stead, 2008) or using planning instruments such as the Dutch "sustainable urbanization ladder" (see Duffhues & Bertolini, 2016) and the Swedish "four step principle" (see Johansson et al, 2018).…”
Section: 4mentioning
confidence: 99%