Investigating ACF Policy Change Theory in a Unitary Policy Subsystem: The Case of Ghanaian Public Sector Information Policy

In 2019, the government of Ghana overhauled its access to public information rules through the Right to information Act. Prior to this legislation, access to public sector information was not formally regulated and the new legislation provided a legal framework for making public sector information a...

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Main Authors: B. Timothy Heinmiller, Emmanuel M. Osei, Eugene Danso
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: OpenEdition 2021-03-01
Series:International Review of Public Policy
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/irpp/1894
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spelling doaj-de117a65cb904db3a1f0c4ac9efb76502021-05-04T09:04:14ZengOpenEditionInternational Review of Public Policy2679-38732706-62742021-03-01310.4000/irpp.1894Investigating ACF Policy Change Theory in a Unitary Policy Subsystem: The Case of Ghanaian Public Sector Information PolicyB. Timothy HeinmillerEmmanuel M. OseiEugene DansoIn 2019, the government of Ghana overhauled its access to public information rules through the Right to information Act. Prior to this legislation, access to public sector information was not formally regulated and the new legislation provided a legal framework for making public sector information accessible to the general public. From an Advocacy Coalition Framework (ACF) perspective, the passage of the Right to Information Act represents a major policy change and provides a case in which the ACF theory of major policy change can be investigated. This case is also interesting because it took place in a unitary policy subsystem, as opposed to a competitive or collaborative subsystem. Unitary subsystems are characterized by a single, dominant advocacy coalition, in this case a pro-transparency coalition, and are relatively uncommon in the ACF literature. The purpose of this paper is to investigate ACF policy change theory in the Ghanaian public sector information policy subsystem – as a unitary subsystem – to determine whether it can explain the major policy change that took place with the passage of the Right to Information Act. The investigation finds strong empirical support for the ACF’s ‘pathways’ hypothesis and moderate support for the ‘power’ hypothesis.http://journals.openedition.org/irpp/1894Advocacy Coalition FrameworkGhanapolicy change theoryunitary policy subsystem
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author B. Timothy Heinmiller
Emmanuel M. Osei
Eugene Danso
spellingShingle B. Timothy Heinmiller
Emmanuel M. Osei
Eugene Danso
Investigating ACF Policy Change Theory in a Unitary Policy Subsystem: The Case of Ghanaian Public Sector Information Policy
International Review of Public Policy
Advocacy Coalition Framework
Ghana
policy change theory
unitary policy subsystem
author_facet B. Timothy Heinmiller
Emmanuel M. Osei
Eugene Danso
author_sort B. Timothy Heinmiller
title Investigating ACF Policy Change Theory in a Unitary Policy Subsystem: The Case of Ghanaian Public Sector Information Policy
title_short Investigating ACF Policy Change Theory in a Unitary Policy Subsystem: The Case of Ghanaian Public Sector Information Policy
title_full Investigating ACF Policy Change Theory in a Unitary Policy Subsystem: The Case of Ghanaian Public Sector Information Policy
title_fullStr Investigating ACF Policy Change Theory in a Unitary Policy Subsystem: The Case of Ghanaian Public Sector Information Policy
title_full_unstemmed Investigating ACF Policy Change Theory in a Unitary Policy Subsystem: The Case of Ghanaian Public Sector Information Policy
title_sort investigating acf policy change theory in a unitary policy subsystem: the case of ghanaian public sector information policy
publisher OpenEdition
series International Review of Public Policy
issn 2679-3873
2706-6274
publishDate 2021-03-01
description In 2019, the government of Ghana overhauled its access to public information rules through the Right to information Act. Prior to this legislation, access to public sector information was not formally regulated and the new legislation provided a legal framework for making public sector information accessible to the general public. From an Advocacy Coalition Framework (ACF) perspective, the passage of the Right to Information Act represents a major policy change and provides a case in which the ACF theory of major policy change can be investigated. This case is also interesting because it took place in a unitary policy subsystem, as opposed to a competitive or collaborative subsystem. Unitary subsystems are characterized by a single, dominant advocacy coalition, in this case a pro-transparency coalition, and are relatively uncommon in the ACF literature. The purpose of this paper is to investigate ACF policy change theory in the Ghanaian public sector information policy subsystem – as a unitary subsystem – to determine whether it can explain the major policy change that took place with the passage of the Right to Information Act. The investigation finds strong empirical support for the ACF’s ‘pathways’ hypothesis and moderate support for the ‘power’ hypothesis.
topic Advocacy Coalition Framework
Ghana
policy change theory
unitary policy subsystem
url http://journals.openedition.org/irpp/1894
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