We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
Making National Participatory Institutions Work: Bureaucrats, Activists, and AIDS Policy in Brazil.
- Authors
Rich, Jessica A. J.
- Abstract
What are the conditions under which participatory institutions increase the voice of marginalized groups in policymaking? Existing studies of local participatory institutions highlight the role of leftist politicians and a strong civil society in determining outcomes, yet they fail to explain significant variation among participatory institutions at the national level. Examining the case of Brazil's AIDS policy sector, this article argues that to fully understand the dynamics of national participatory governance, we must consider the role of bureaucrats. As studies of state-society synergy have shown, bureaucrats may seek outside political support from civil society when other actors inside the state prevent them from advancing their policy preferences. National bureaucrats may create new participatory institutions, and even help civil society delegates coordinate their engagement in such institutions, as strategies to strengthen their policy alliances with civil society.
- Subjects
BRAZIL; AIDS; POLICY sciences; GOVERNMENT policy; SOCIAL policy; CIVIL service; CIVIL society
- Publication
Latin American Politics & Society, 2019, Vol 61, Issue 2, p45
- ISSN
1531-426X
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1017/lap.2018.80