Health policy has been termed a ‘chameleon concept’, referring to its ability to take on different forms of disciplinarity as well as different roles and functions. This paper extends Paton’s analysis by exploring the paradox of health policy as a field of academic inquiry—sitting across many of the boundaries of social science but also marginalised by them. It situates contemporary approaches within disciplinary traditions, explaining its inter- and multi-disciplinary character. It also presents a ‘way of seeing’ health policy in terms of three axes: central/local, profession/management, and health/healthcare. The paper concludes with a call for a new research agenda which recognises health policy’s pedigree but also one which carves a dis...
Abstract Lawless et al provide a valuable narrative of using program logic to develop an evaluation...
Taking health inequalities in the UK as a case study, the paper draws on historical institutionalism...
Beliefs that health policy-making is an inherently 'ideological' or 'irrational' process appear to h...
Health policy has been termed a ‘chameleon concept’, referring to its ability to take ...
Health systems have entered a third era embracing whole systems thinking and posing complex policy a...
Health systems have entered a third era embracing whole systems thinking and posing com...
Powell and Mannion's recent editorial discusses how different 'models' of the policy process have be...
This commentary on the Editorial ‘The politics and analytics of health policy’ by Professor Calum Pa...
This commentary on the Editorial ‘The politics and analytics of health policy’ by Professor Calum Pa...
Health systems have entered a third era embracing whole systems thinking and posing complex policy a...
Let us start with an example of health policy analysis in action. Within that category of countries ...
Published 22 June 2016This article directs attention to the significance, for health promotion advoc...
Public health research is overtly orientated towards influencing policy and yet, despite official co...
The first paper in this series on building the field of Health Policy and Systems Research (HPSR) in...
Lawless et al provide a valuable narrative of using program logic to develop an evaluation of Health...
Abstract Lawless et al provide a valuable narrative of using program logic to develop an evaluation...
Taking health inequalities in the UK as a case study, the paper draws on historical institutionalism...
Beliefs that health policy-making is an inherently 'ideological' or 'irrational' process appear to h...
Health policy has been termed a ‘chameleon concept’, referring to its ability to take ...
Health systems have entered a third era embracing whole systems thinking and posing complex policy a...
Health systems have entered a third era embracing whole systems thinking and posing com...
Powell and Mannion's recent editorial discusses how different 'models' of the policy process have be...
This commentary on the Editorial ‘The politics and analytics of health policy’ by Professor Calum Pa...
This commentary on the Editorial ‘The politics and analytics of health policy’ by Professor Calum Pa...
Health systems have entered a third era embracing whole systems thinking and posing complex policy a...
Let us start with an example of health policy analysis in action. Within that category of countries ...
Published 22 June 2016This article directs attention to the significance, for health promotion advoc...
Public health research is overtly orientated towards influencing policy and yet, despite official co...
The first paper in this series on building the field of Health Policy and Systems Research (HPSR) in...
Lawless et al provide a valuable narrative of using program logic to develop an evaluation of Health...
Abstract Lawless et al provide a valuable narrative of using program logic to develop an evaluation...
Taking health inequalities in the UK as a case study, the paper draws on historical institutionalism...
Beliefs that health policy-making is an inherently 'ideological' or 'irrational' process appear to h...