Journal ArticleDOI
Street-Level Bureaucracy: Dilemmas of the Individual in Public Services
Reads0
Chats0
About:
This article is published in Journal of Health Politics Policy and Law.The article was published on 1983-08-01. It has received 3521 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Street-level bureaucracy & Public sector.read more
Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Privatizing Risk without Privatizing the Welfare State: The Hidden Politics of Social Policy Retrenchment in the United States
TL;DR: This paper showed that although most programs have indeed resisted retrenchment, U.S. social policy has also offered increasingly incomplete risk protection in an era of dramatic social change, and argued that the declining scope of risk protection also reflects deliberate and theoretically explicable strategies of reform adopted by welfare state opponents in the face of popular and changeresistant policies.
Journal ArticleDOI
Doing health policy analysis: methodological and conceptual reflections and challenges
Gill Walt,Jeremy Shiffman,Helen Schneider,Susan F Murray,Ruairi Brugha,Lucy Gilson,Lucy Gilson,Lucy Gilson +7 more
TL;DR: Attention is drawn to the roles of the policy researcher and the importance of reflexivity and researcher positionality in the research process, and ways of advancing the field of health policy analysis with recommendations on theory, methodology and researcher reflexivity.
Journal ArticleDOI
Diffusion Theory and Knowledge Dissemination, Utilization, and Integration in Public Health
TL;DR: This work compares diffusion, dissemination, and implementation with related notions that have served other fields in bridging science and practice and suggests ways to blend diffusion with other theory and evidence in guiding a more decentralized approach to dissemination and implementation in public health.
Journal ArticleDOI
Automating Inequality: How High-Tech Tools Profile, Police, and Punish the Poor
TL;DR: The use of digital technologies will not slow down in any significant way, particularly in the public sector as mentioned in this paper, almost two decades into the new millennium, and it is unlikely that the use of technology will slow down.