Dynamics of governance change

This research line conceptualizes and analyses continuity and change in policies, polity, and politics, and in turn how these enable and constrain the dynamics and directions of societal change in different contexts.
Because of the wicked nature of the challenges facing governance actors in the fields of climate, water, environment, food and agriculture, it is very important that policy systems respond to new insights, and do not become locked-in into old problem definitions and understandings. Policy and institutional change towards transformation is of paramount importance, but is hard to create because policies and institutions are often deeply entrenched, surrounded by constituencies that benefit from them, and because of existing power constellations.
Aim
This research line aims to capture the mechanisms that drive or inhibit policy and institutional dynamics in the direction of societally desired sustainability outcomes. Change dynamics can occur because of policy oriented learning, experimentation, evaluation, public dialogue, but also because of political power play, compliance with international norms, diffusion, path dependency, or sensemaking. Societal change that emanates from these dynamics is often characterized in the literature as either transformational or incremental, but our research has shown that it helps to distinguish between the depth, scope and pace of change, and that change can be continuous and transformational through accumulating small wins.
That is why we pay extensive attention to the conceptual, methodological and empirical challenges of tracking (policy) change, and the influence of underlying mechanisms that make it possible to describe and analyse patterns of stasis and change. Moreover, interdisciplinary collaborations allow for assessing the extent to which change contributes to more sustainable outcomes, such as a circular food system and economy. Insights in the mechanisms and directions of change are used to identify the levers for change in designing new governance arrangements to manage wicked problems.
Key publications
- Transformational change: governance interventions for climate change adaptation from a continuous change perspective
- Mechanisms for policy (dis)integration: Explaining food policy and climate change adaptation policy in the Netherlands
- More than peanuts: Transformation towards a circular economy through a small-wins governance framework
Contact us
Do you have a question about our research? Contact us.
dr. JJL (Jeroen) Candel, MA
Associate professor
Research themes
Dynamics of governance change
This research line aims to capture the mechanisms that drive or inhibit policy and institutional dynamics in the direction of societally desired sustainability outcomes.
Between fragmentation and connectivity
We study how governance arrangements can better connect actors, scales and sectors to address complex sustainability challenges.
Conflict and contestations
We strive to understand the relevance and implications of observed value conflicts and varying risk perceptions for governing transformations.
Follow us on social media
Stay up-to-date and learn more through our social channel.