Have a personal or library account? Click to login
Reflections on post-bailout policy analysis in Ireland Cover

Reflections on post-bailout policy analysis in Ireland

By:
Open Access
|Dec 2020

References

  1. Adshead, M., & Scully, D. (in press). Political parties and the policy process. In J. Hogan & M. P. Murphy (Eds), Policy analysis in Ireland. Bristol: Policy Press.
  2. Anderson, G. (1996). The new focus on the policy capacity of the federal government. Canadian Public Administration, 39 (4), 469–88.10.1111/j.1754-7121.1996.tb00146.x
  3. Callanan, M. (2018). Local government in the Republic of Ireland. Dublin: Institute of Public Administration.
  4. Connaughton, B. (in press). Committees and the legislature. In J. Hogan & M. P. Murphy (Eds), Policy analysis in Ireland. Bristol: Policy Press.
  5. Craft, J., & Howlett, M. (2013). The dual dynamics of policy advisory systems: The impact of externalization and politicization on policy advice. Policy and Society, 32 (3), 187–97.10.1016/j.polsoc.2013.07.001
  6. Cullen, P. (in press). Gender expertise and policy analysis. In J. Hogan & M. P. Murphy (Eds), Policy analysis in Ireland. Bristol: Policy Press.
  7. Cullina, E., Harold, J., & McHale, J. (in press). Irish science policy – A case-study in evidence-based policy design for small open economies. In J. Hogan & M. P. Murphy (Eds), Policy analysis in Ireland. Bristol: Policy Press.
  8. Daly, M. (2019). ESPN thematic report on national strategies to fight homelessness and housing exclusion – Ireland, ESPN. Brussels: European Commission.
  9. Department of Public Expenditure and Reform. (2020). Annual report 2019. Dublin: Government of Ireland.
  10. Donnison, D. (2015). On tap but not on top? Notes for a discussion at the SPA annual conference on the ways in which academic contributions are made to policy analysis and debate. Social Policy Association Conference, University of Ulster, Belfast, 4 July.
  11. Dukelow, F. (in press). The evolution of social policy analysis in Ireland: From a theocentric to an econocentric paradigm? In J. Hogan & M. P. Murphy (Eds), Policy analysis in Ireland. Bristol: Policy Press.
  12. Edelman. (2020). 2020 Edelman trust barometer global report. Retrieved from https://www.edelman.com/trustbarometer [1 November 2020].
  13. Goodwin, S., & Phillips, R. (2015). Policy capacity in the community sector. In B. Head & K. Crowley (Eds), Policy analysis in Australia (pp. 1–20). Bristol: Policy Press.10.46692/9781447310280.020
  14. Harris, C. (in press). Democratic innovations and policy analysis: Climate policy and Ireland’s citizens’ assembly (2016–2018). In J. Hogan & M. P. Murphy (Eds), Policy analysis in Ireland. Bristol: Policy Press.
  15. Harvey, B. (2012). Changes in employment and services in the voluntary and community sector in Ireland, 2008–2012 Dublin: ICTU.
  16. Harvey, B. (2014). Are we paying for that. Government funding & social justice advocacy. Dublin: The Advocacy Initiative.
  17. Heclo, H. (1974). Modern social policies in Britain and Sweden: From relief to income maintenance. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
  18. Heffernan, M. (2020). Pandemics and an uncharted future. London: Jericho Chambers.
  19. Hogan, J., & Murphy, M. (Eds) (in press). Policy analysis in Ireland. Bristol: Policy Press.
  20. Hogan, J., & Timoney, N. (2017). A discursive institutionalist approach to understanding the changes in Irish social partnership policy after 2008. Journal of the Statistical and Social Inquiry Society of Ireland, 45 (1), 67–92.
  21. Howlett, M. (2009). Policy analytical capacity and evidence-based policymaking: Lessons from Canada. Canadian Public Administration, 52 (2), 153–75.10.1111/j.1754-7121.2009.00070_1.x
  22. Howlett, M., & Ramesh, M. (2003). Studying public policy: Policy cycles and policy subsystems (2nd edn). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  23. MacCarthaigh, M. (in press). The changing policy analysis capacity of the Irish state. In J. Hogan & M. P. Murphy (Eds), Policy analysis in Ireland. Bristol: Policy Press.
  24. McCarthy, D. (in press). Foreword. In J. Hogan & M. P. Murphy (Eds), Policy analysis in Ireland. Bristol: Policy Press.
  25. McInerney, C. (in press). Think tanks and their role in policy making in Ireland. In J. Hogan & M. P. Murphy (Eds), Policy analysis in Ireland. Bristol: Policy Press.
  26. Murphy, M. C. (in press). Europeanized policy making in Ireland. In J. Hogan & M. P. Murphy (Eds), Policy analysis in Ireland. Bristol: Policy Press.
  27. Murphy, M. P., & O’Connor, O. (in press). Civil society organisations and policy analysis: Resilience in the context of shifting political opportunity structures? In J. Hogan & M. P. Murphy (Eds), Policy analysis in Ireland. Bristol: Policy Press.
  28. O’Donnell, R. (in press). The social partners and the NESC: From tripartite dialogue via common knowledge events to network knowledge. In J. Hogan & M. P. Murphy (Eds), Policy analysis in Ireland. Bristol: Policy Press.
  29. O’Riordan, J., & Boyle, R. (in press). Policy analysis in the civil service. In J. Hogan & M. P. Murphy (Eds), Policy analysis in Ireland. Bristol: Policy Press.
  30. O’Rourke, B. (in press). Media discourses on the economy in Ireland: Framing the policy possibilities. In J. Hogan & M. P. Murphy (Eds), Policy analysis in Ireland. Bristol: Policy Press.
  31. O’Rourke, B. K., & Hogan, J. (2014). Guaranteeing failure: Neoliberal discourse in the Irish economic crisis. Journal of Political Ideologies, 19 (1), 41–59.10.1080/13569317.2013.869456
  32. Quinlivan, A. (in press). Ireland’s ‘unique blend’ – Local government and policy analysis. In J. Hogan & M. P. Murphy (Eds), Policy analysis in Ireland. Bristol: Policy Press.
  33. Ruane, R. (in press). Introducing evidence into policy making in Ireland. In J. Hogan & M. P. Murphy (Eds), Policy analysis in Ireland. Bristol: Policy Press.
  34. Sabel, C. (2020). Governance and wicked problems: Environment, climate, human services and quality jobs. Paper prepared for the Knowledge and Policy: Confronting Governance Challenges in the New Decade Conference, Dublin, January.
  35. Torfing, J., Sørensen, E., & Røiseland, A. (2019). Transforming the public sector into an arena for co-creation: Barriers, drivers, benefits, and ways forward. Administration & Society, 51 (5), 795–825.10.1177/0095399716680057
  36. Voorberg, W. H., Bekkers, V. J., & Tummers, L. G. (2015). A systematic review of co-creation and co-production: Embarking on the social innovation journey. Public Management Review, 17 (9), 1333–5710.1080/14719037.2014.930505
  37. Walsh, K., et al. (2013). In other words: Policy makers’ perceptions of social justice advocacy. Dublin: The Advocacy Initiative.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/admin-2020-0028 | Journal eISSN: 2449-9471 | Journal ISSN: 0001-8325
Language: English
Page range: 145 - 160
Published on: Dec 31, 2020
Published by: Sciendo
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 4 times per year

© 2020 Mary Murphy, John Hogan, published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.