Governing multi-level governance: Comparing domain dynamics in German land-local relationships and prisons

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Abstract

While the notion of governance has received considerable scholarly attention, much less is known about change, and its sources, across modes of governance within respective policy domains. This article explores these neglected issues in two policy domains characterized by multi-level governance characteristics: Land (state)-local relationships in the domain of building administration and relationships governing the prisons domain in Germany. It does so in three steps. First, the article explores governance and considers endogenous and exogenous sources of change. Second, it discusses the institutional arrangements in the two domains and analyses modes of governance and their change. Third, the article compares the different dynamics of change and links these findings to wider debates regarding change across and within modes of governance. The analysis of the two domains suggests that 'hunting around' effects (i.e. permanent instability) are less prominent than suggested by cultural theory, while external pressures for change are filtered by the preferences of the actors within the respective domains. © Blackwell Publishing Ltd. 2005.

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Lodge, M., & Wegrich, K. (2005). Governing multi-level governance: Comparing domain dynamics in German land-local relationships and prisons. Public Administration, 83(2), 417–442. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0033-3298.2005.00456.x

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