
Published online:
31 October 2023
Published in print:
20 May 1999
Online ISBN:
9780197732731
Print ISBN:
9780195128215
Contents
Chapter
4 Institutions, Ideas, Interests, Actors, and the Accidents of Policy Episodes
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Pages
107–124
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Published:May 1999
Cite
Tuohy, Carolyn Hughes, 'Institutions, Ideas, Interests, Actors, and the Accidents of Policy Episodes', Accidental Logics: The Dynamics of Change in the Health Care Arena in the United States, Britain, and Canada (New York, NY , 1999; online edn, Oxford Academic, 31 Oct. 2023), https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195128215.003.0004, accessed 4 May 2025.
Abstract
Readers of the literature of comparative public policy will recognize the argument of the previous two chapters as a version of “historical institutionalism: This approach emphasizes the importance of decisions taken at crucial points in time, decisions that become crystallized in the formal and informal rules governing behavior, and that establish the context in which subsequent decisions will be made. Historical institutionalism, however, is a house with many mansions: it allows for a variety of emphases regarding the factors that bring about critical moments of decision-making and that shape decisions at those moments.
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