Nudging public policy: examining the benefits and limitations of paternalistic public policies
- Lanham Rowman & Littlefield 2021
- vii, 268 p.
- Economy, Polity, and Society .
Table of content: ntroduction by Rosemarie Fike, Stefanie Haeffele, and Arielle John
Chapter 1: Irrationality is not Unreasonable: Behavioral Economics, Rationality, and Implications for Public Policy by Mario J. Rizzo
Chapter 2: What Is a Nudge? by Jeffrey Bristol
Chapter 3: Why Nudges Should Be Local and Decentralized by Katarina Hall
Chapter 4: Incentivized Migration in Colonial Contexts: The Challenge of Asymmetric Information in Public Policy Nudges by Oliver McPherson-Smith
Chapter 5: Nudge, Nations, and Cultural Change: The Process of Identity Formation in Singapore by Erin Dunne
Chapter 6: Nudging Lobbyists to Register with Online Registration and Grace Periods by James M. Strickland
Chapter 7: Nudging Choices in Education Policy by Shannon Lee
Chapter 8: Public Policy, the Environment, and the Use of Green Nudges by Cynthia Boruchowicz
Chapter 9: The Paradoxes of the Privacy Paradox by Will Rinehart
Chapter 10: Nudging, Trust, and the “Sharing Economy” in Latin America by Luis H. Lozano-Paredes [https://rowman.com/ISBN/9781786614865/Nudging-Public-Policy-Examining-the-Benefits-and-Limitations-of-Paternalistic-Public-Policies]
This book asks several critical questions relevant to those interested in public policy: What is a nudge? What are the ethical implications of and justifications for nudges? Are we able to have nudges without affecting one’s freedom to choose? In what institutional context are nudges likely to work well and in what context are they likely to fail? The text explores several real-world instances of government attempts at successful choice architecture across a wide range of policy topics: internet privacy laws, environmental policy, education policy, the sharing economy, and creating a national culture.
This approach also highlights the spontaneous and evolutionary nature of social institutions like culture and trust. Attempts from policymakers to generate these social institutions where they did not exist previously are unlikely to succeed unless they are aligned with the unique characteristics of the society in question. This raises the question of whether the seemingly successful policy interventions were even necessary. A few of the chapters in this book directly examine these issues through case studies of both Latin America and Singapore. (https://rowman.com/ISBN/9781786614865/Nudging-Public-Policy-Examining-the-Benefits-and-Limitations-of-Paternalistic-Public-Policies)
9781786614865
Political planning--Citizen participation Economics--Psychological aspects