“…Scholars look for actors behaving in ways expected from policy entrepreneurs, like networking and strategically using expertise (see Aviram et al, 2020). This widely used approach has documented policy entrepreneurs involved in community cancer care (Petchey et al, 2007); state wetland management (Arnold, 2015); reform of the London healthcare system (Oborn et al, 2011); adoption of vertical greening policies in Shanghai (Lu et al, 2020); efforts to reduce government corruption in Israel (Navot & Cohen, 2015); development of China's minimum livelihood guarantee system (Hammond, 2013); disability policymaking in Indonesia (Setijaningrum & Rahardian, 2022); innovating in local delivery of social services in Israel (Aviv et al, 2021); adoption of social health insurance policies in India (Maurya & Mintrom, 2020); and the development of a European Union biofuels policy (Palmer, 2015). Sometimes, this approach identifies entire units of government which achieved a policy innovation as policy entrepreneurs, including US states that adopt climate policies (Drummond, 2010;Rabe, 2004), countries that adopt a participatory budgeting model (Wampler, 2009), and city governments that implement a new approach to managing refugees (Garcés-Mascareñas & Gebhardt, 2020) and an open government policy (Ruvalcaba-Gomez et al, 2020).…”