Operationalizing inclusive growth : can malleable ideas survive metricized governance?
Hill O'Connor, Clementine and Smith, Katherine and Hughes, Ceri and Meier, Petra and Purshouse, Robin (2024) Operationalizing inclusive growth : can malleable ideas survive metricized governance? Public Administration, 102 (1). pp. 114-130. ISSN 0033-3298 (https://doi.org/10.1111/padm.12916)
Preview |
Text.
Filename: OConnor_etal_PA_2023_Operationalizing_inclusive_growth.pdf
Final Published Version License: Download (1MB)| Preview |
Abstract
Advocates of inclusive growth claim it provides policymakers with a means of combining economic success with social inclusivity, making it highly attractive across a wide range of settings. Here, we explore how three UK policy organizations (a devolved national government, a city region combined authority, and a local council) are pursuing inclusive growth goals. Drawing on 51 semistructured interviews, documentary analysis and policy ethnography, we argue that inclusive growth is a classic "chameleonic idea," strategically imbued with malleable qualities that serve to obscure substantive, unresolved tensions. These characteristics are helpful in achieving alliances, both within policy organizations and between these organizations and their multiple stakeholders. However, these same qualities make inclusive growth challenging to operationalize, especially in governance settings dominated by metrics. The process of representing a malleable idea via a set of metricized indicators involves simplification and stabilization, both of which risk disrupting the fragile coalitions that malleability enables.
ORCID iDs
Hill O'Connor, Clementine, Smith, Katherine ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1060-4102, Hughes, Ceri, Meier, Petra and Purshouse, Robin;-
-
Item type: Article ID code: 84304 Dates: DateEvent31 March 2024Published13 February 2023Published Online29 January 2023Accepted7 April 2022SubmittedSubjects: Social Sciences > Economic Theory Department: Strategic Research Themes > Society and Policy
Strategic Research Themes > Health and Wellbeing
Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences (HaSS) > Social Work and Social Policy > Social Work and Social PolicyDepositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 20 Feb 2023 15:49 Last modified: 11 Nov 2024 13:48 URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/84304