Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-jkksz Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T07:37:34.527Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Canadian Public Policy: The State of the Discipline

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 March 2023

Grace Skogstad*
Affiliation:
Department of Political Science, University of Toronto Scarborough, Room 580, Highland Hall, 1265 Military Trail, Toronto, ON M1C 1A4, Canada
*
*Corresponding author. E-mail: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

This article examines the state of the English-language peer-reviewed literature published over the 2011–2021 period whose objective is to describe and explain processes of development of Canadian public policies and their consequences. It first presents a profile of the surveyed literature's attention to different policy sectors, elements of public policy, and its chosen methodologies to study them. It then examines the empirical and theoretical contributions of the literature to uncovering the constitutive actors and their interactions in policy processes in policy domains of Canadian jurisdictions; the logics of chosen policy instruments and their distributive effects; and the interactions among Canada's structural, institutional and ideational features and policy actors’ motivations and behaviour with processes of policy innovation, continuity and change. A foremost contribution of Canadian policy studies to comparative policy studies is to demonstrate the causal impacts of the interaction of institutional, structural and ideational/cultural factors on processes of policy development.

Résumé

Résumé

Cet article fait le point sur l'état des études sur les politiques publiques canadiennes en examinant le corpus des documents évalués par les pairs publiés au cours de la décennie 2011–2021 dont l'objectif déclaré est d'expliquer les caractéristiques des politiques publiques canadiennes. Il présente un profil de la documentation en termes d'attention portée à différents secteurs politiques, d'éléments de politiques publiques étudiés et de méthodologies utilisées pour aborder les questions et les énigmes autour de ces politiques publiques. L'article examine les contributions empiriques et théoriques de la littérature, en mettant l'accent sur leur apport à notre compréhension de la façon dont les processus de politiques publiques et les développements politiques qui en découlent sont conditionnés par le contexte structurel, institutionnel et conceptuel de l'élaboration des politiques.

Type
Review Essay/Essai critique
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NCCreative Common License - ND
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is unaltered and is properly cited. The written permission of Cambridge University Press must be obtained for commercial re-use or in order to create a derivative work.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Canadian Political Science Association (l’Association canadienne de science politique) and/et la Société québécoise de science politique

Introduction

This article takes stock of the current state of the English-language discipline of Canadian public policy studies over the 2011–2021 period by surveying its main theoretical and empirical contributions and gaps on key themes of interest to Canadian political scientists. This remit, while broad, is nonetheless a challenge, given the different understandings among political scientists of the goals of public policy scholarship and how they can best contribute to these goals (Capano and Howlett, Reference Capano and Howlett2020a: 3). In face of these debates, the article aligns with the goals of what Atkinson (Reference Atkinson2016: 703) has called “policy research” and Cairney and Weible (Reference Cairney and Weible2017: 621) describe as policy process literature: “the study of the patterns and interactions surrounding public policy over time.” A focus on the policy process literature—that is, describing and explaining the motivations of policy actors, their interactions, and the contextual and other factors that account for public policy development—is warranted because the policy process is integral to understanding why we get the public policies we do and “who gets what, when, how” (Lasswell, Reference Lasswell1958). As Simeon observed in his 1976 article “Studying Public Policy” in this journal, the policy process is the crucial “impact point” where actors and contextual institutional, structural and ideational features meet (Reference Simeon1976: 58). Moreover, knowledge of the policy process is “the redoubt of political science” (Atkinson, Reference Atkinson2016: 714), not least because of the discipline's close attention to the institutional context within which authoritative decision makers make policy choices. The decision to examine policy process research, to the neglect of the policy analysis literature whose objective is the evaluation of existing policies and the recommendation of future policies (Cairney and Weible, Reference Cairney and Weible2017: 621), is justified by the detailed attention to policy analysis provided in a recent edited collection (Dobuzinskis and Howlett, Reference Dobuzinskis and Howlett2018).

This article focuses on the contribution of literature that examines Canadian public policies published over the decade 2011–2021. This temporal scope does not give appropriate recognition to the significant contributions of earlier analyses by political scientists of several policy domains in which Canadian governments have historically intervened. However, examining recent scholarship serves the objective of providing a profile of the current preoccupations, contributions and gaps in Canadian policy scholarship. Policy studies have been an especially dynamic discipline in recent decades, characterized by rigorous debate about useful theoretical and methodological approaches to comprehend the admitted complexity of policy making (Cairney, Reference Cairney2012; Weible and Sabatier, Reference Weible and Sabatier2018). Notwithstanding their different ontological, epistemological and methodological approaches (Fischer et al., Reference Fischer, Torgerson, Durnova, Orsini, Fischer, Torgersen, Durnova and Orsini2015; Jones and Radaelli, Reference Jones and Radaelli2015; Yanow, Reference Yanow2003), positivist/mainstream and interpretivist studies have a common goal of understanding the processes through which policies emerge and die off (Durnova and Weible, Reference Durnova and Weible2020). In a manner consistent with the broader endeavour in social science to identify the causal mechanisms or pathways that operate over time to produce a given effect (Hedström and Swedberg, Reference Hedström and Swedberg1998), public policy scholars have turned their attention to uncovering how the motivations, strategies and actions of individual and/or corporate political actors are collectively aggregated in a given context into policy development (Capano and Howlett Reference Capano and Howlett2020a). Novel methodologies—for example, with respect to computer-assisted analyses of texts—are additional tools being used to uncover policy discourses in the policy process (Skogstad and Wilder, Reference Skogstad and Wilder2019). Focusing on the more recent Canadian literature sheds a spotlight on its contributions to these current theoretical debates and methodological tools.

As described in Appendix I, several search methods were used to arrive at the corpus of more than 100 titles that are included in this stocktaking analysis. There is no attempt to measure the influence of the surveyed literature in terms of citations: a decision consistent with critics of Charbonneau et al.'s (Reference Charbonneau, Bernier and Bautista-Beauchesne2018) citation-based assessment of the influence of Canadian public administration scholarship (Howlett, Reference Howlett2018; Roberts, Reference Roberts2018).

The article proceeds as follows. Section 1 provides a profile of the surveyed literature, categorized by features of the policy process under examination, by policy sector and by methodology. It demonstrates the broad array of policy issues and domains investigated by Canadian policy studies. The subsequent three sections of the article assess the contribution of the surveyed literature to our understanding of policy processes and outputs. Section 2 examines what we learn from Canadian policy studies about (a) influential political actors and the nature of their interaction in different policy domains and Canadian jurisdictions and (b) how the motivations of political actors are shaped, empowered and/or constrained by Canada's economic structures, institutional rules and norms, and prevailing cultural and epistemic ideas. Section 3 examines the contribution of the surveyed literature to explaining the selection of policy instruments and their distributive consequences, while section 4 focuses on the contribution of the literature to understanding mechanisms and processes of policy continuity and change. Section 5 concludes with suggestions for future lines of inquiry.

1. A Profile of Canadian Policy Studies

What policy domains and features of public policy and public policy processes receive attention from Canadian policy scholars? Are there policy domains that do not receive the attention that their social and economic significance would suggest they should? Table 1 provides an answer to these questions. It categorizes the surveyed corpus by common elements of public policy that policy studies scholars seek to explain (Simeon, Reference Simeon1976; Weible and Sabatier, Reference Weible and Sabatier2018). Within each element/column, individual studies are grouped by conventional policy domains and their methodology noted.

Table 1 The Scope and Methods of Studies of Canadian Public Policy

Key

N: Canada case study

P: one province case study

M: one municipality case study

C preceding N, P or M: a comparative study

QL: qualitative methods

QN: quantitative methods

MX: mixed (both qualitative and quantitative methods)

Combined annotations

P-QL: single province, qualitative methods

N-QL: Canada, qualitative methods

M-QL: single municipality, qualitative methods

CP-QL: two or more provinces, qualitative methods

CPM-QL: two or more provinces and municipalities, qualitative methods

CPF-QL: one or more Canadian provinces and a foreign jurisdiction

CN-QL: Canada one of other national cases, qualitative methods

CM-QL: two or more municipalities, qualitative methods

CNP-QL: Canada and one or more provinces, qualitative methods

CP-QN: two or more provinces, quantitative methods

CP-MX: two or more provinces, qualitative and quantitative methods

* Monograph

Studies in the first category/column, labelled policy dynamics, are those whose goal is to explain innovation, reform, and/or continuity in policy goals, interpretive frameworks, and/or regimes either over an extended period or at a discrete point in time. Explaining these dynamics normally entails an account of the policy process. Studies in the second category/column have as their foremost objective to explain the choice or design of policy instruments, including instrument mixes, and their settings. Policy instruments are understood here as the substantive (for example, regulatory, market-based, informational) means or tools that governments use to achieve their policy goals. Insofar as governments also use procedural policy instruments, such as consultative mechanisms (Howlett, Reference Howlett2000), to achieve their policy goals, studies within the second column often also shed light on the nature of the policy process. Studies in the third category/column document and account for the distributional effects of policies: that is, their winners and losers. In the fourth category/column are studies whose goal is to document and/or account for cross-jurisdictional diffusion and/or convergence/divergence in one or more elements of public policy. This element of public policy is of particular interest to federal systems like Canada's, given their underlying rationale is to balance values of diversity and unity. It is also of interest to the question of the influence of extraterritorial political actors on policy processes and their selected policy instruments.

The four elements used to categorize the surveyed literature are not fully discrete. Monograph-length studies usually address more than one policy element. Indeed, the dynamics of continuity and change investigated by comparative studies in the first column of Table 1 usually extend to the choice of policy instruments, the distributional effects of policies, and sometimes, as well, patterns of diffusion and/or divergence/convergence across jurisdictional cases.

Publications are annotated (after their date) to indicate their jurisdictional focus (P for provincial, N for national, M for municipal), whether they are comparative (denoted by C before their jurisdictional focus) and their methods (QL for qualitative methods, QN for quantitative methods, and MX for both quantitative and qualitative [mixed] methods).Footnote 1 Book-length single or comparative studies are denoted by *. The notes accompanying Table 1 provide details on how to interpret the annotations.

Table 1 shows that a significant amount of literature (as denoted by the annotation C), including monographs, seeks to explain how and why public policies of Canadian jurisdictions differ from, or are similar to, one another and those beyond the country's borders. This comparative orientation is consistent with an earlier examination of journal articles examining Canadian public policy (Montpetit et al., Reference Montpetit, Allison and Engeli2016). Interprovincial comparisons make up a good portion of the comparative research. At the same time, there is a continuing persistence of the descriptive case studies that Montpetit et al. (Reference Montpetit, Allison and Engeli2016) also observed, some of which use interpretivist approaches.

Notwithstanding their different objectives, Table 1 indicates that Canadian public policy studies overwhelming rely on qualitative methods to analyze small-N case studies. Interviews and documents are primary sources used by qualitative research to trace the development of policies over time. Only a small minority of the literature uses quantitative or mixed methods to draw causal inferences across larger-N cases. These exceptions are comparative studies of provincial or national economic and fiscal policies (Haddow, Reference Haddow2014, Reference Haddow2015, Reference Haddow2018, Reference Haddow2020; Jacques Reference Jacques2020; Simon and Tatalovich, Reference Simon and Tatalovich2014) and minimum income protection (Noel, Reference Noel2020).

Table 1 shows that the Canadian public policy discipline spans the breadth of sectors in which government policies touch the lives of Canadians. They include policy domains that have long been arenas of both federal and provincial involvement, such as social assistance, seniors’ income security, contributory pensions, health care, immigration and multiculturalism, natural resource and energy development, environmental protection, and economic and fiscal policy. They also include other issues that have risen higher on the policy agendas of governments in recent years, such as early childhood education and care and family policy, climate change, and innovation policy. In keeping with provinces’ exclusive or shared jurisdiction in several of these policy areas—indeed, provinces have been described as “the most crucial generators of public policy in Canada” (Atkinson et al., Reference Atkinson, Béland, Marchildon, McNutt, Philipps and Rasmussen2013: xvi)—their policies are important sites of study for all four policy elements. Given the limited jurisdiction of Canadian municipalities, it is also understandable that only a handful of studies in the corpus of literature examine municipal-level policies. Less understandable, given their importance, is the paucity of studies of national economic, industrial and innovation policies.

As the column titles indicate, the specific elements of public policy that scholars of Canadian public policy seek to explain differ. For some, it is to account for the temporally specific decisions of a government to adjust its policy goals or alter its policy instruments in a specific policy domain.Footnote 2 For others, it is to account for the dynamics of policy innovation, continuity, and/or change over an extended period, including in overarching interpretive frameworks/policy paradigms and policy regimes.Footnote 3 For the latter, the puzzle is similarities or differences in elements of public policies across space, including across Canadian jurisdictionsFootnote 4 or between Canada and other liberal welfare states.Footnote 5 To explain these differences and provide answers to questions about policy choices in the short term or over the longue durée, public policy scholars examine policy processes.

2. Documenting and Explaining Canadian Policy Processes

Policy processes are complex, but their constitutive features can be defined as “the interactions that occur over time between public policies and surrounding actors, events, contexts, and outcomes” (Weible, Reference Weible, Weible and Sabatier2018: 2). The endeavour to describe and explain the policy process centres on uncovering the (differing) motivations and goals of influential individual and collective political actors, as well as the internal (cognitive, affective) and external (contextual) factors and events that affect their actions in the policy process. While the resulting frameworks and theories generally assume internal factors of bounded rationality, they differ in their assumptions about what motivates policy actors and how their capacities to act on and realize their motivations are impacted by institutional and other features of the policy-making landscape (Heikkila and Cairney, Reference Heikkila, Cairney, Weible and Sabatier2018; Millar et al., Reference Millar, Lesch and White2019; Weible and Sabatier, Reference Weible and Sabatier2018). Depending upon how one conceptualizes the motivations of political actors, “interactions” in the policy process are depicted as struggles for power, authority or voice among those with rival interests and different beliefs (Atkinson, Reference Atkinson2016: 710, 708) or as “pragmatic” (non-ideological) exercises of “collective puzzling” (Montpetit, Reference Montpetit2016: 160, 158).

To assess the empirical and theoretical contributions of the surveyed corpus of literature to our knowledge of policy processes in Canada and elsewhere, this section examines answers to the following questions: First, what do we learn from this literature about the influential actors in Canadian policy processes, their motivations and goals, and the nature of their interactions in different policy domains? Further, how, if at all, do policy processes differ across jurisdictions, governing administrations, and policy domains? Second, what factors—internal and external to actors—does it highlight as motivating, enabling and circumscribing the actions in the policy process?

The second question addresses how policy scholars link micro- (individual-) level actions in the policy process to sectoral and macro-level institutional, ideational, and structural contextual factors. In the case of Canada, foremost among the last category are Canada's institutions of executive-dominated parliament, its federal system wherein national and provincial governments exercise independent authority in a number of policy domains but concurrent and overlapping authority in other domains, and distinct provincial/regional political cultures and economies.

A. Variable policy processes across policy domains and jurisdictions

The surveyed Canadian literature documents multiple Canadian policy processes insofar as the influential political actors and the nature of their interactions vary across policy domains and Canadian jurisdictions. Unsurprisingly, given Canada's executive-dominated parliamentary governments, elected state actors are at the centre of policy processes; their electoral goals, normative motivations, left/right ideologies, and strategies affect agenda-setting, policy formulation, policy adoption and policy implementation.

In policy domains where federal and provincial governments enjoy independent authority, there is variation across policy sectors and jurisdictions in terms of the active and influential non-state policy actors in the agenda-setting and policy formulation stages of the policy process and the nature of their interactions with state officials. Given journal space constraints, the illustrative examples provided here focus on the variability of their role in policy making in policy domains of historic and current importance to Canadians and their governments.

Social policies provide examples of variation in the influential non-state actors in policy processes across jurisdictions. Non-state actors have played an influential role in the development of Quebec's “distinctive” social policy model and participate in collaborative policy processes in Quebec (Arsenault, Reference Arsenault2018; Haddow, Reference Haddow2015) but lack similar influence in Ontario's more conflictual policy processes (Haddow, Reference Haddow2015). Civil society groups have played a far more significant role in the development of early childhood education and care policy in Quebec than they have in English-speaking provinces (Mahon et al., Reference Mahon, Anttonen, Bergqvist, Brennan and Hobson2012; White, Reference White2017). Across policy domains that fall under the jurisdiction of the government of Canada, civil society actors have been more influential in policy developments with respect to income security policies for seniors than for the unemployed (Béland and Myles, Reference Béland and Myles2012). While non-state stakeholders have been influential in the development of Canada's widely touted, exemplary immigration policies (Rheault, Reference Rheault2013; Triadafilopoulos, Reference Triadafilopoulos2013), analysts also point to the significant influence of bureaucratic state officials in the adjustment of immigration policies over time (Boucher, Reference Boucher2013; Ellermann, Reference Ellermann2021; Paquet, Reference Paquet2014, Reference Paquet2019). At the municipal level, Doberstein (Reference Doberstein2016) documents differences in the extent of engagement of municipal officials and community stakeholders in homelessness policy in Toronto as compared to Vancouver and Calgary.

Policies with respect to energy/natural resource development and, relatedly, environmental protection also show considerable interprovincial variation. Examining policies with respect to the development of the northern Alberta tar sands, Hoberg and Phillips (Reference Hoberg and Phillips2011) find capital investors and developers enjoying a “near monopoly” in a closed policy subsystem. Carter (Reference Carter2018, Reference Carter2020) argues that the exclusion or marginalization of environmental groups in environmental policy making is a common feature of the three Canadian petro-states of Alberta, Saskatchewan and Newfoundland and Labrador. By contrast, in non-petro-states, such as Ontario, environmental groups have more influence in more pluralist and open policy processes (Winfield, Reference Winfield2012). At the national level, Doern et al. (Reference Doern, Auld and Stoney2015) document the shifting role and influence of various non-state actors in federal environmental policy regimes over several decades.

The lesser research into other exclusive federal or provincial policy domains warrants caution in drawing conclusions about their policy processes. Still, studies of federal policies with respect to science, technology and innovation indicate variation in the extent to which civil society actors are participants in policy making. For example, they are present in the development of agricultural biotechnology policies but not those for genomics and life sciences (Doern et al., Reference Doern, Phillips and Castle2016).

In the several policy domains in which both national and provincial orders of government are involved, either by virtue of concurrent jurisdiction or Ottawa's assumption of responsibility through its spending power, state actors’ motivating ideas and interests are, unsurprisingly, major influences on policy outputs. While it is safe to assume governmental actors are responding to their differing constituents’ interests and ideas, tracing and documenting the latter's impact on the nature and outcomes of interactions in the policy process can often be a secondary consideration (Skogstad and Bakvis, Reference Skogstad, Bakvis, Bakvis and Skogstad2020).

B. Actor motivations, contextual factors and policy decisions

Canadian policy scholars have directed their attention to unravelling how the partisan and electoral goals of political actors and/or their cognitive and normative beliefs are shaped, empowered and/or constrained by Canada's economic structures, institutional rules and norms, and prevailing cultural and epistemic ideas. The following examples are illustrative of these interactive dynamics in different policy domains.

Examinations of provincial policies with respect to energy resources development are instructive of how economic structures interact with institutions and ideas in the policy process. Urquhart's (Reference Urquhart2018) account of the development of the tar sands in northeastern Alberta attributes causal power to the economic interests and ideas of market fundamentalism of developers, the business community and governments. Also focusing on petro-states, Carter (Reference Carter2018, Reference Carter2020) links their significant dependence on revenues from oil extraction, in combination with dominant norms of staples-led economic development and neoliberal ideologies, to the erosion of environmental protection in Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Newfoundland and Labrador. In a similar vein, Clancy (Reference Clancy2011) argues that the structural power of capital investors and developers has given them a privileged position in offshore oil and gas development in the Nova Scotian Basin and limited the influence of non-business interests on policy agendas.

Turning to national policies, Macdonald (Reference Macdonald2020) argues that a combination of structural factors (the competing material interests of provinces dependent on fossil fuels and those that rely on hydro power) and institutional factors (constitutional arrangements that give provinces jurisdiction in the policy field, as well as weak and ineffective intergovernmental processes related to energy and climate change) explain why the government of Canada has consistently missed its climate change targets. The interaction of structural and institutional causal factors also figures large in Doern et al.'s (Reference Doern, Auld and Stoney2015) explanation of the government of Canada's “green-lite” environmental policy regime. The authors attribute it to “the importance and power of Canada's natural resources and the staples theory that underpins them,” as well as to the fragmented and diffused institutional context of federal environmental policy making (14).

The conditioning impact of Canada's federal system on the motivations, resources and behaviour of political actors and attendant policy outcomes has received considerable attention. The allocation of authority, including fiscal resources, across the two orders of government has been linked to motivations of competitive state-building and collusive benchmarking on the part of federal and provincial governments with respect to social policies (Béland and Weaver, Reference Béland and Weaver2019; Christensen, Reference Christensen2020). Concurrent jurisdiction has also created incentives and opportunities for bureaucratic entrepreneurship in provincial immigration and integration policies (Paquet, Reference Paquet2014, Reference Paquet2019). As discussed further below, Canada's federal system is also implicated in dynamics of policy innovation, continuity and change; processes of policy diffusion; and inequities in the distribution of social policy benefits.

Scholars have also elucidated how the parliamentary and electoral systems impact the motivations and strategies of political actors in the policy process. For example, while the Westminster parliamentary system affords majority governments the opportunity to align their ideological, partisan and electoral goals in pursuit of desired policy reforms (Skogstad and Whyte, Reference Skogstad and Whyte2015), the intersecting logics of Canada's simple plurality electoral and regionalized party systems can also impede such alignments (Skogstad, Reference Skogstad2021). The concentration of authority in Canada's executive (and delegated bureaucracy) for aspects of immigration policy, Ellermann (Reference Ellermann2021) argues, has provided these decision makers with “political insulation” from restrictionist or liberalizing pressures from public opinion, interest groups, immigrant-sending countries and other immigrant-receiving countries.

There is also attention to the causal role of ideas, discourses and knowledge in the policy process. Scholars have, for example, documented the existence and effects on policy developments of gendered assumptions about childcare work (L. Pasolli, Reference Pasolli2015; White and Prentice, Reference White and Prentice2016; White, Reference White2017) and elder care (Scala et al., Reference Scala, Paterson and Richard-Nobert2019), norms of universality in social welfare (Béland et al., Reference Béland, Blomqvist, Andersen, Palme and Waddan2014, Reference Béland, Marchildon and Prince2019; Béland, Marchildon et al., Reference Béland, Marchildon, Mioni and Petersen2021), paradigms of social assistance in provincial social assistance reforms (Daigneault, Reference Daigneault2015), norms of legitimate conjugal (family) relationships on refugee determination, immigration and citizenship policies (Gaucher, Reference Gaucher2018), assumptions about what constitutes authoritative knowledge in the regulation of assisted reproduction technologies (Scala, Reference Scala2019) and the development of many provincial early childhood education and care policies (Prentice and White, Reference Prentice and White2019), and media framing of biofuels policies (Bognar et al., Reference Bognar, Skogstad and Mondou2020). These examples show the policy process to be a tug-of-war of rival normative and cognitive policy ideas whose influence is bounded by institutional rules and cultural norms.

3. Policy Instruments: Their Selection and Distributive Effects

Accounting for the policy instruments (means, tools) selected to realize policy goals, their underlying logics (expected rewards and sanctions), and their distributive and other consequences is an important endeavour of policy studies (Capano and Lippi, Reference Capano and Lippi2017). These objectives are usually a part of studies that examine policy dynamics and developments over time (the subject of the next section of this article). Here, attention is on the contribution of the Canadian literature to (a) documenting the distributive effects of policy instruments and (b) explaining decision makers’ choice of policy instruments, including with respect to extra-jurisdictional diffusion and policy transfer processes.

Canadian policy studies have documented the uneven effects of policy instruments and their settings when it comes “who gets what” in terms of fiscal (Haddow, Reference Haddow2015, Reference Haddow2018; Jacques, Reference Jacques2020) and social policies with respect to minimum income protection (Béland and Daigneault, Reference Béland and Daigneault2015; Haddow, Reference Haddow2014; Noel, Reference Noel, Banting and Myles2013, Reference Noel2020) and family policies, including for parental leave and child care and education (K. E. Pasolli, Reference Pasolli2015; Prentice and White, Reference Prentice and White2019; Snow, Reference Snow2016; White and Friendly, Reference White and Friendly2012). A consistent finding is the uneven treatment of Canadians across provinces, with some provinces taking greater efforts and having more success in reducing economic inequality. Quebec is found to stand apart in terms of its greater redistributive efforts and more generous social welfare state (Haddow, Reference Haddow2014; Noel, Reference Noel, Banting and Myles2013, Reference Noel2020). In other policy domains, such as health care (Marchildon, Reference Marchildon, Béland, Marchildon and Prince2019) and public education (Wallner, Reference Wallner2014), where Ottawa's spending power has equalized the fiscal capacity of provinces, the effect has also been to reduce inequities in the treatment of Canadians.

While both quantitative and qualitative methods have been used to document the uneven benefits and burdens of Canadian governments’ policy instrument choices, interpretivist qualitative methods have proved especially fruitful in demonstrating the privileging of some forms of knowledge and frames over others in the selection of policy instruments, with consequent impacts on the Canadians directly affected by these choices. Examples of these studies include documentation of the gendered effects of elder care policy frames and instrument mixes (Scala et al., Reference Scala, Paterson and Richard-Nobert2019), inequities in health care owing to the intersectionality of unequal race, gender and class power relations (Hankivsky, Reference Hankivsky2011), persistent inequities across jurisdictions in services available to individuals directly affected by HIV/AIDS (Hindmarch et al., Reference Hindmarch, Orsini, Gagnon, Hindmarch, Orsini and Gagnon2017), the discriminatory impacts of the Harper government's national security policies in the post-9/11 period on religious minorities (McCoy, Reference McCoy2018) and the barriers faced by migrants and refugees who did not conform to policy norms of the Harper government regarding legitimate conjugal (family) relationships (Gaucher, Reference Gaucher2018).

To explain interprovincial differences in redistributive efforts, scholars have demonstrated the importance of the left/right ideology of governing parties. They have shown that left-wing governments are more likely to pursue countercyclical fiscal strategies than are conservative parties (Haddow, Reference Haddow2020) and to prioritize social policy (education, health, social assistance) spending when facing fiscal pressures. By contrast, conservative governments retrench their spending when facing fiscal pressures in order to avoid deficit spending (Jacques, Reference Jacques2020; Simon and Tatalovich, Reference Simon and Tatalovich2014). There is agreement that interprovincial differences in the combined power resources of unions and governing parties of the left or centre account for Quebec's greater minimum income protection and redistribution efforts relative to other provinces (Haddow, Reference Haddow2014; Noel, Reference Noel2020). At the same time, as noted above, motivations of state-building on the part of Quebec state actors are also seen to play a role in social policy expansion in that province (Béland and Lecours, Reference Béland and Lecours2016; Béland and Weaver, Reference Béland and Weaver2019; Béland, Prince et al., Reference Béland, Prince and Kent Weaver2021). Most often, though, as demonstrated by contributors to Banting and Myles’ (Reference Banting and Myles2013) account of how Canada's efforts at income redistribution fell behind other Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries, there is no single explanation for the selection and settings of redistributive policy instruments, but rather a combination of partisan, institutional, structural and ideational factors.

Dual instrumental and normative logics—sometimes complementary, often at odds—are found to be at play in the selection of policy instruments in other policy domains. Harrison (Reference Harrison2012) argues that governments’ willingness to use carbon taxes is facilitated both by a personal normative commitment on the part of a party leader and by electoral incentives. A combination of normative goals and material factors has also been credited with explaining variation in subfederal climate policy instruments of members of the Western Climate Initiative (Houle et al., Reference Houle, Lachapelle and Purdon2015). Looking at a very different policy domain—the Harper Conservative government's official languages policy—Cardinal et al. (Reference Cardinal, Gospard and Leger2015) demonstrate how policy instruments, as embodying values, can be used to promote the instrumental political goals of politicians. Competing logics of instrumentality and normative legitimacy, including with respect to gender, are also evident in the selection of provincial policy instruments for early childhood education and care (White, Reference White2017) and federal and provincial elder care (Scala et al., Reference Scala, Paterson and Richard-Nobert2019).

The comparative public policy literature has drawn attention over the past decade to the complex policy instrument mixes that emerge when new policy goals and new policy logics are patched or layered onto earlier ones (Capano and Howlett, Reference Capano and Howlett2020b). Canadian policy scholars are contributing to the theoretical and empirical development of this literature—for example, by illustrating through case studies the effects on policy development of the addition of environmental goals onto energy policy goals (Johns, Reference Johns2019; Rayner et al., Reference Rayner, Howlett and Wellstead2017; Wellstead et al., Reference Wellstead, Rayner and Howlett2016) and the deployment of procedural policy instruments to realize them (Martens et al., Reference Martens, McNutt and Rayner2015). Given the limited case studies to date, however, complex policy mixes and their evolution and effects warrant greater attention.

A further question regarding policy instrument selection is the extent to which Canadian decision makers are motivated to emulate, learn from, or compete with other jurisdictions in their preferred policy instruments. Canadian policy scholars have addressed this question by examining the transfer and diffusion of policy instruments and their underlying logics both internally (across Canadian jurisdictions) as well as transnationally (from external jurisdictions into Canada). Beginning with the first, Wallner (Reference Wallner2014) demonstrates how provincial education policies have converged under the incentives and opportunities created by Canada's federal system for cross-provincial policy learning. A recent edited collection also provides some evidence of learning, emulation and competition motivations behind interprovincial policy transfers in a handful of policy domains (Boyd and Olive, Reference Boyd and Olive2021). Nonetheless, the scope for cross-provincial policy transfer appears to be specific to policy issues and to be delimited by the latitude and incentives afforded governments by their different political economies (Boyd, Reference Boyd2019; Carter et al., Reference Carter, Fraser and Zalik2017; Harrison, Reference Harrison2013).

Turning to the second question, studies also stress the contingent effects of extra-jurisdictional developments and pressures on Canadian public policies, including their preferred policy instruments. Comparing the policies of Ontario and Quebec, Canada's most industrialized provinces, over the 1990–2010 period of economic pressures of globalization and postindustrialism, Haddow (Reference Haddow2015) finds significant differences in the two provinces’ interventionist policies with respect to economic development. He argues that these policy differences can be attributed to differences in the two provinces’ party systems and organization of labour and business, which result in a coordinated market economy and collaborative policy process in Quebec, as compared to a liberal-market-oriented economy and uncoordinated policy process in Ontario. Elsewhere, the effects of local institutional and political/partisan factors in mediating the impact of transnational policy ideas are revealed in discourses and policies for child care (Mahon et al., Reference Mahon, Anttonen, Bergqvist, Brennan and Hobson2012, Reference Mahon, Bergqvist and Brennan2016; White, Reference White2017), social security (Béland, Marchildon et al., Reference Béland, Marchildon, Mioni and Petersen2021) and immigration (Triadafilopoulos, Reference Triadafilopoulos2012).

While individual studies suggest variation across governments in their preferred policy instruments, and few extraterritorial pressures on the (settings of) instruments they adopt, there are important gaps in our knowledge of this element of the policy process.

4. Mechanisms, Processes and Pathways of Policy Continuity and Change

An important question for public policy scholars is why and how public policies—as constituted by their interpretive frameworks, policy goals and/or policy instruments—become sticky and resistant to reform even as changing circumstances undermine their ability to realize their goals or, conversely, prove unstable and vulnerable to the reforms that policy makers deem desirable or necessary. Sticky policies are especially a puzzle in Westminster parliamentary systems, such as Canada's, where majority federal and provincial governments can undertake transformative changes to policies that fall within their exclusive legal authority—but sometimes do not. By contrast, the ability of governments to effect significant reforms to policies that are “locked in”—for example, by joint decision-making rules—is also a puzzle. This section of the article discusses how Canadian policy scholarship is contributing to building theory to solve puzzles surrounding processes of policy continuity and change.

One way researchers are doing so is by drawing on historical institutionalist theorizing about how policies evolve and change gradually over time under mechanisms and processes such as policy drift (Myles, Reference Myles, Banting and Myles2013), layering and conversion (Johns, Reference Johns2019) and patching and stretching (Wellstead et al., Reference Wellstead, Rayner and Howlett2016; Rayner et al., Reference Rayner, Howlett and Wellstead2017). Studies such as these add to our knowledge of the circumstances under which these mechanisms are deployed and prove effective in bringing about change over time.

A second contribution comes in the form of longitudinal comparative studies whose explicit goal is to build theoretical accounts of the circumstances under which policy makers are willing and capable of undertaking significant policy change. Particularly noteworthy here are monograph-length studies that have examined social policies, including health care, contributory pensions, and early childhood education and care.

Canada's universal single-payer model of health care has proven durable and highly resistant to reforms since it was established in the 1960s, including changes intended to strengthen and expand it. Tuohy's (Reference Tuohy2018) comparative analysis of the pace and scale of health care reforms in Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom and the Netherlands provides an explanation for why Canada's health care system has undergone far less change than other countries when it comes to the introduction of market mechanisms. Her account gives causal weight to the strategic judgments of decision makers with respect to the rewards and sanctions of choosing one set of actions over others. She argues that the pace and scale of reforms are contingent upon decision makers’ shared willingness to engage in change and upon their beliefs about their current and future capacity to enact and implement the scope and pace of change they have in mind. These strategic judgments, Tuohy stresses, are importantly affected by government-wide political and institutional circumstances. In the case of Canada, with the single-payer system enjoying wide public support, the result is an embedded model of accommodation between the medical profession and the state.

Also examining intertemporal policy dynamics in health care, Boothe (Reference Boothe2015) mounts a slightly different argument to explain how earlier decisions with respect to whether to engage in incremental or radical reforms affect the scope of later policy reforms. She argues that incremental processes of policy development, as characterized by those around Canada's universal hospital and medical insurance coverage, beget a restricted understanding of the scope of health care services over time. Mechanisms of elite and public adaptive expectations about feasible and desirable policies, she argues, explain why Canada has not adopted a nationwide universal pharmaceutical program while the United Kingdom and Australia have.

The integrated Canada Pension Plan (CPP) and Quebec Pension Plan (QPP) set up in the 1960s provides an example of a policy undergoing significant change despite the hurdles of a joint decision-making system. Comparing contributory pension design and reforms in Canada, Britain, Germany and the United States, Jacobs (Reference Jacobs2011) describes the CPP/QPP reforms in the late 1990s as the “most dramatic instance of policy investment” across the four countries. In his explanation of how Canada was able to impose “large and immediate visible costs on constituents to solve a problem still decades away” (194), Jacobs theorizes the causal role of policy makers’ pre-existing “mental models” in their decisions to make social investments that impose costs on voters and groups in the short term, in anticipation of future benefits. He argues that decision makers made intertemporal investments when they believed doing so would generate net benefits for society—but also only when they enjoyed both electoral safety with respect to the next election and the institutional capacity to resist organized opposition to their proposals.

Seeking to explain interjurisdictional lags, including among Canadian provinces, in public investment in early childhood education and care (ECEC), White (Reference White2017) highlights the intersecting effects of cultural, discursive and institutional factors. She argues that social investment in ECEC requires a change of cognitions to view ECEC as a worthwhile investment in human capital and of normative beliefs to regard ECEC as an appropriate responsibility of the state and not markets or families. These cultural shifts, in her view, require experts who alter cognitive and principled beliefs regarding ECEC, political leaders with autonomy from political and public opposition, policy advocates who promote new norms, and political leaders and policy entrepreneurs whose framing strategies change beliefs and practices. Variations in the development of ECEC policies across jurisdictions, including Canadian provinces, can be accounted for by the contextually contingent presence or absence of these mechanisms.

Studies such as the foregoing are making at least two important contributions to Canadian and comparative public policy scholarship. One is to demonstrate the causal significance of state actors’ strategic judgments (Tuohy, Reference Tuohy2018), adaptive expectations (Boothe, Reference Boothe2015), mental models (Jacobs, Reference Jacobs2011) and cognitive and normative beliefs (White, Reference White2017) in variously facilitating or impeding policy change. A second is to illustrate the extent to which these mechanisms of policy change and stability strategies are facilitated or constrained by the institutionalization of antecedent policy choices, institutional rules, and dominant cognitive and normative beliefs about feasible and desirable public policies.

5. Conclusion

This article has appraised the state of English-language policy studies by examining its theoretical and empirical contributions to our knowledge of policy processes in Canada. Focusing on a survey of literature published over the 2011–2021 period, the article has documented the collectively broad scope of Canadian scholarship, illustrating how case studies span the important domains in which federal and provincial public policies affect the lives of Canadians. It has also demonstrated the theoretical pluralism of Canadian policy scholarship, with studies giving different weight to the role of structurally shaped interests, normative and cognitive ideas and discourses, and institutional rules and norms in determining the motivations and interactions of influential actors in the policy process. While particularities of the institutional context have long been examined as an explanation of cross-case similarities or differences in policy processes and outputs, Canadian policy scholars are also contributing to the comparative literature's increasing attention to how political actors’ strategies and interactions in the policy process (and ensuing outputs) are affected by similarities and differences in the cultural, ideational and discursive features of the policy-making context (Wilder, Reference Wilder2017).

In its individual and collective documentation of different policy processes across policy domains and Canadian jurisdictions, the literature also details differences across Canadians in terms of whose interests, ideas and/or knowledge prove influential and, consequently, who benefits from public policies. Case studies of social and environmental policy domains within provincial jurisdiction reveal differences in the social and economic actors who are included or marginalized in the policy processes and that result, by extension, in disparities in whose interests and/or ideas are promoted by public policies. Less extensively investigated and discussed here are the uneven/even impacts on the influence of social actors of the multitiered processes (provincial, federal, intergovernmental) in areas of shared or overlapping federal and provincial jurisdiction.

The plural theoretical approaches to explaining Canadian public policies do not extend to favoured methods. Few studies use quantitative methods; a mixture of quantitative and qualitative methods (Haddow, Reference Haddow2015, Reference Haddow2020) is even more rare. Nor is there evidence of the use of unsupervised machine (computer) learning to analyze large texts—for example, to determine the dimensions of policy discourses. Rather, the methodological contribution of Canadian policy studies consists overwhelming of demonstrating how qualitative methods of data gathering prove useful both in illuminating how some stakeholders (and their ideas and interests) are marginalized in the policy process, as well as in tracing the causal mechanisms and pathways from inputs into the policy process to its outputs (an excellent example is Schwartz, Reference Schwartz2016).

Several policy issues that have been the subject of scholarly analyses in the literature surveyed here will remain on the agenda for the foreseeable literature. The COVID-19 pandemic that began in 2020 and the continuing aging of the Canadian population have intensified reformist pressures on policies with respect to both health care and pensions. Finding synergies and tackling trade-offs among goals of economic growth, energy resource development, environmental sustainability, and/or climate change will also be high priorities for Canadian citizens and their governments. Complex problems of this sort will continue to require collective action across the multiple orders of federal, provincial and/or municipal governments. They will do so amid contestation not just over competing economic and political interests and rival normative ideas but also over the extent to which the knowledge of scientific experts versus that of other stakeholders should be relied upon. Documenting and accounting for the policy processes and outcomes in these policy domains is an important opportunity for Canadian scholars to make empirical and theoretical contributions to policy studies.

Another opportunity for Canadian policy scholarship to contribute to understanding policy dynamics in contexts of multilevel governance lies in policy domains in which municipal governments have a large stake but require the financial and other support of federal and/or provincial governments to realize their policy goals. While existing literature on the topic has pointed to multilevel governance in municipal matters (Henstra, Reference Henstra2013; Horak and Young, Reference Horak and Young2012; Lucas and Smith, Reference Lucas and Smith2019; Young and Tolley, Reference Young and Tolley2019), the interactions among social and governmental actors throughout the process of policy agenda-setting, formulation and adoption, and/or implementation of municipal policies warrant closer attention.

Insofar as policy instruments have significant consequences for who benefits from public policies, as well for subsequent policy dynamics, they should receive greater attention from political scientists. While individual Canadian political scientists have made important contributions to theory-building regarding the design of policy instruments (Capano and Howlett, Reference Capano and Howlett2020b) and their feedback effects (Béland and Schlager, Reference Béland and Schlager2019), these theoretical insights remain relatively underdocumented in studies of Canadian public policy. So, too, do the complex policy mixes that develop as policies are patched up over time. Insofar as policy mixes and patching are an effort not only to adjust policy instruments but also to shore up their legitimacy and that of the policy process, they warrant more attention from scholars of Canadian public policy.

Finally, to contribute to building theory of policy dynamics of continuity and change, it is recommended that Canadian policy scholars go beyond comparisons with other federal or liberal economies and turn their comparative lens to the multilevel European Union (EU). Comparative case studies, for example, of EU and Canadian climate policies—where the EU has been a world leader and Canada a comparative laggard—afford an opportunity to shed further light on the causal entanglement of cultural/discursive and institutional causal factors in processes of policy innovation and reform.

Acknowledgments

The author is grateful to the three anonymous reviewers for their very constructive feedback on an earlier version of this article.

Appendix I. The Selection of the Surveyed Literature

The foremost consideration for including literature in this stock-taking is its direct contribution to explaining and elaborating processes and outputs of domestic public policy making by Canadian, provincial and/or municipal governments. Excluded from the corpus of surveyed literature are thereby studies that investigate possible determinants of public policy—like public opinion, the attitudes and strategies of groups and social movements and media framing of issues—but stop short of examining their role in the policy process and their impact on policy choices and developments. Also excluded are publications on Indigenous–government relations in specific policy areas. They can be justifiably viewed as matters of intergovernmental relations and their importance is such as to warrant their own stock-taking account. Nor are studies of Canadian equalization policy, a policy area that is a matter of intergovernmental relations, included in the surveyed corpus.

The following research search techniques were used to select the surveyed literature. First, a search of Google Scholar was conducted using the terms “Canada” AND “policy” AND “case” for the period 2010–August 2021 (when the research first began for this study). It resulted in an excess of two million titles, some of which were repetitive, that included peer-reviewed as well as non-peer-reviewed books, policy papers and theses. A manual sorting of the Google Scholar results identified titles that included Canada as part of a comparative study. Second, a search of the PAIS index using the terms “Canada” AND “policy” was conducted for peer-reviewed books, journal articles and book chapters published over the period 2011–2021; publications of research institutes, think tanks and governments were excluded. Its yield of over 10,000 titles was similarly inefficient. Individual entries in the PAIS search were then investigated, with publications included in the corpus of analyzed literature confined to those whose objective is to explain one or more features of Canadian domestic public policy processes and policy development. The end date of 2021 for the selection of literature led to the elimination of articles on governments' responses to COVID-19 on the grounds that the pandemic had not yet concluded by 2021.

Third, a search was undertaken of the abstracts of several journals to find relevant titles. The journals and the rationales for searching them specifically are as follows. American Review of Canadian Studies, Canadian Journal of Political Science, Canadian Political Science Review, Canadian Public Administration and Canadian Public Policy have a mandate to publish Canadian content. Critical Policy Studies is likely to be the publication venue of choice for those within the critical scholarship tradition. Energy Policy is a possible venue of choice given the significance of energy policy to Canada. Journal of Comparative Policy Analysis, Governance, Review of Policy Research, Policy Sciences and Policy Studies Journal are the foremost journals of public policy. Politique et Société could be a major outlet for French-language public policy scholarship.

Fourth, the PAIS and Google Scholar searches were supplemented by examining book reviews in the Canadian Journal of Political Science and the websites of Canadian university presses (UBC Press, UTP and McGill-Queen's). And fifth, citations in selected publications that referenced Canadian, provincial or municipal public policies were also examined for possible inclusion in the corpus.

These multiple methods yielded a corpus of over 100 publications judged by the author to provide a reasonably representative sample of English-language publications over the 2011–21 period whose objective is to explain one or more features of Canadian, provincial and/or municipal public policy processes and policy outputs.

Footnotes

1 Studies that use NVivo to code documents are coded as using qualitative methods, as are those that provide descriptive statistics of their small-N case studies. Coded as quantitative studies are studies that use multivariate statistical techniques to draw causal inferences about their cases. Mixed methods studies use a combination of quantitative and qualitative methods. Contrary to Yanow (Reference Yanow2003), the category qualitative does not distinguish between positivist qualitative studies that use small-N cases to derive generalizable conclusions and interpretivist scholars that emphasize the importance of contextually specific understandings and knowledge of events. While their methods of analyzing data (and research goals) differ, positivist-oriented scholars also tend to make use of interpretivist methods to access data: that is, observing/participating, interviewing, and reading documents.

2 Studies of discrete reforms, including to policy instruments, examine income maintenance in Saskatchewan (Daigneault, Reference Daigneault2015), contributory pensions in Ontario (Christensen, Reference Christensen2020), schools in Ontario (Thompson and Wallner, Reference Thompson and Wallner2011), federal product risk regulation (Kiss, Reference Kiss2014), protection of water resources in Alberta (Heinmiller, Reference Heinmiller2013), climate change instruments in Alberta (Boyd, Reference Boyd2019), grain marketing (Skogstad and Whyte, Reference Skogstad and Whyte2015) and processes for developing energy resources in some provinces (Hoberg and Phillips, Reference Hoberg and Phillips2011; Martens et al., Reference Martens, McNutt and Rayner2015).

3 See monographs on Quebec's social economy (Arsenault, Reference Arsenault2018), the social and economic policies of Quebec and Ontario (Haddow, Reference Haddow2015), national policies with respect to assisted reproductive technologies (Scala, Reference Scala2019), early childhood education and care in British Columbia (L. Pasolli, Reference Pasolli2015), immigration (Gaucher, Reference Gaucher2018), multiculturalism (McCoy, Reference McCoy2018), primary and secondary education (Wallner, Reference Wallner2014), provincial energy resource development (Clancy, Reference Clancy2011; Urquhart, Reference Urquhart2018), national (Doern et al., Reference Doern, Auld and Stoney2015) and provincial (Carter, Reference Carter2020; Winfield, Reference Winfield2012) environmental protection, and national climate change policy (Macdonald, Reference Macdonald2020). Article-length single-case studies with this objective include accounts of the absence of pharmacare in Canada (Boothe, Reference Boothe2013) and fracking policy in Saskatchewan (Carter and Eaton, Reference Carter and Eaton2016).

4 Table 1 reveals the multiple policy areas that have been the subject of interprovincial comparisons. Municipal policies subject to comparison are fewer and include housing (Doberstein, Reference Doberstein2016), environmental and climate change (Schwartz, Reference Schwartz2016, Reference Schwartz2019; Johns, Reference Johns2019) and emergency management (Henstra, Reference Henstra2013).

References

Arsenault, Gabriel. 2018. L’économie sociale au Québec: Une perspective politique. Quebec: Presses de l'Université du Québec.Google Scholar
Atkinson, Michael M. 2016. “Richard Simeon and the Policy Sciences Project.” Canadian Journal of Political Science 49 (4): 703–20.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Atkinson, Michael M., Béland, Daniel, Marchildon, Gregory P., McNutt, Kathleen, Philipps, Peter W. B. and Rasmussen, Ken. 2013. Governance and Public Policy in Canada: A View from the Provinces. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Banting, Keith. 2014. “Transnational Convergence? The Archeology of Immigrant Integration in Canada and Europe.” International Journal 69 (1): 6684.Google Scholar
Banting, Keith. 2020. “The Three Federalisms and Change in Social Policy.” In Canadian Federalism: Performance, Effectiveness, and Legitimacy, ed. Bakvis, Herman and Skogstad, Grace. 4th ed. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Banting, Keith and Myles, John, eds. 2013. Inequality and the Fading of Redistributive Politics. Vancouver: UBC Press.Google Scholar
Béland, Daniel, Blomqvist, Paula, Andersen, Jorgen Goul, Palme, Joakim and Waddan, Alex. 2014. “The Universal Decline of Universality? Social Policy Change in Canada, Denmark, Sweden and the UK.” Social Policy & Administration 48 (7): 739–56.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Béland, Daniel and Daigneault, Pierre-Marc, eds. 2015. Welfare Reform in Canada: Provincial Social Assistance in Comparative Perspective. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Béland, Daniel and Lecours, André. 2016. “Ideas, Institutions and the Politics of Federalism and Territorial Redistribution.” Canadian Journal of Political Science 49 (4): 681701.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Béland, Daniel, Marchildon, Gregory P., Mioni, Michele and Petersen, Laus. 2021. “Translating Social Policy Ideas: The Beveridge Report, Transnational Diffusion, and Post-war Welfare State Development in Canada, Denmark and France.” Social Policy & Administration 56 (2): 315–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Béland, Daniel, Marchildon, Gregory P. and Prince, Michael J., eds. 2019. Universality and Social Policy in Canada. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Béland, Daniel and Myles, John. 2012. “Varieties of Federalism, Institutional Legacies, and Social Policy: Comparing Old-Age and Unemployment Insurance Reform in Canada.International Journal of Social Welfare 21 (S1): S75S87.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Béland, Daniel, Prince, Michael J. and Kent Weaver, R.. 2021. “From Retrenchment to Selective Social Policy Expansion: The Politics of Federal Cash Benefits in Canada.” Canadian Journal of Political Science 54 (4): 809–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Béland, Daniel and Schlager, Edella. 2019. “Varieties of Policy Feedback Research: Looking Backward, Moving Forward.” Policy Studies Journal 47 (2): 184203.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Béland, Daniel and Waddan, Alex. 2019. “Unidentical Twins: Recent Social Policy Developments in Canada and the United States.” Journal of International and Comparative Social Policy 35 (S1): 14.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Béland, Daniel and Weaver, Kent. 2019. “Federalism and the Politics of the Canada and Quebec Pension Plans.” Journal of International and Comparative Social Policy 35 (S1): 2540.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bognar, Julia M., Skogstad, Grace and Mondou, Matthieu. 2020. “Media Coverage and Public Policy: Reinforcing and Undermining Media Images and Advanced Biofuels Policies in Canada and the United States.” Environmental Communication 14 (8): 1127–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boothe, Katherine. 2013. “Ideas and the Limits on Program Expansion: The Failure of Nationwide Pharmacare in Canada since 1944.” Canadian Journal of Political Science 46 (2): 419–53.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boothe, Katherine. 2015. Ideas and the Pace of Change: National Pharmaceutical Insurance in Canada, Australia, and the United Kingdom. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boucher, Anna. 2013. “Bureaucratic Control and Policy Change: A Comparative Venue Shopping Approach to Skilled Immigration Policies in Australia and Canada.” Journal of Comparative Policy Analysis 15 (4): 349–67.Google Scholar
Boyd, Brendan. 2019. “A Province under Pressure: Climate Change Policy in Alberta.” Canadian Journal of Political Science 52 (1): 183–99.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boyd, Brendan and Olive, Andrea, eds. 2021. Provincial Policy Laboratories: Policy Diffusion and Transfer in Canada's Federal System. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bradford, Neil and Wolfe, David A.. 2013. “Governing Regional Economic Development: Innovation Challenges and Policy Learning in Canada.” Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society 6 (2): 331–47.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cairney, Paul. 2012. Understanding Public Policy: Theories and Issues. Houndmills: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cairney, Paul and Weible, Christopher M.. 2017. “The New Policy Sciences: Combining the Cognitive Science of Choice, Multiple Theories of Context, and Basic and Applied Analysis.Policy Sciences 50 (4): 619–27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Capano, Giliberto and Howlett, Michael. 2020a. A Modern Guide to Public Policy. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Capano, Giliberto and Howlett, Michael. 2020b. “The Knowns and Unknowns of Policy Instrument Analysis: Policy Tools and the Current Research Agenda on Policy Mixes.SAGE Open 10 (1): 113.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Capano, Giliberto and Lippi, Andrea. 2017. “How Policy Instruments Are Chosen: Patterns of Decision Makers’ Choices.” Policy Sciences 50 (2): 269–93.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cardinal, Linda, Gospard, Helaina and Leger, Rémi. 2015. “The Politics of Language Roadmaps in Canada: Understanding the Conservative Government's Approach to Official Languages.” Canadian Journal of Political Science 48 (3): 577–99.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carter, Angela and Eaton, Emily. 2016. “Subnational Responses to Fracking in Canada: Explaining Saskatchewan's ‘Wild West’ Regional Approach.” Review of Policy Research 33 (4): 393419.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carter, Angela V. 2018. “Policy Pathways to Carbon Entrenchment: Responses to the Climate Crisis in Canada's Petro Provinces.” Studies in Political Economy 99 (2): 151–74.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carter, Angela V. 2020. Fossilized: Environmental Policy in Canada's Petro-Provinces. Vancouver: UBC Press.Google Scholar
Carter, Angela V., Fraser, Gail S. and Zalik, Anna. 2017. “Environmental Policy Convergence in Canada's Fossil Fuel Provinces? Regulatory Streamlining, Impediments, and Drift.” Canadian Public Policy 43 (1): 6176.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Charbonneau, Ėtienne, Bernier, Luc and Bautista-Beauchesne, Nicholas. 2018. “Punching below Its Weight.” Canadian Public Administration 61 (3): 361–84.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Christensen, Benjamin. 2020. “Ontario Pension Policy Making and the Politics of CPP Reform 1963–2016.Canadian Journal of Political Science 53 (1): 118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clancy, Peter. 2011. Offshore Petroleum Politics: Regulation and Risk in the Scotian Basin. Vancouver: UBC Press.Google Scholar
Constantelos, John. 2014. “Vetoes and Venues: Economic Crises and the Roads to Recovery in Michigan and Ontario.” Canadian Journal of Political Science 47 (4): 827–53.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Daigneault, Pierre-Marc. 2015. “Ideas and Welfare Reform in Saskatchewan: Entitlement, Workfare or Activation?Canadian Journal of Political Science 48 (1): 147–71.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Doberstein, Carey. 2016. Building a Collaborative Advantage: Network Governance and Homelessness Policy-Making in Canada. Vancouver: UBC Press.Google Scholar
Dobuzinskis, Laurent and Howlett, Michael, eds. 2018. Policy Analysis in Canada. Bristol: Policy Press.Google Scholar
Doern, G. Bruce, Auld, Graeme and Stoney, Christopher 2015. Green-Lite: Complexity in Fifty Years of Canadian Environmental Policy. Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Doern, G. Bruce, Phillips, Peter W. B. and Castle, David. 2016. The Innovation Economy and Society Nexus. Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press.Google Scholar
Durnova, Anna P. and Weible, Christopher M.. 2020. “Tempest in a Teapot? Toward New Collaborations between Mainstream Policy Process Studies and Interpretive Policy Studies.” Policy Sciences 53 (3): 571–88.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ellermann, Antje. 2021. The Comparative Politics of Immigration: Policy Choices in Germany, Canada, Switzerland and the United States. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fischer, Frank, Torgerson, Douglas, Durnova, Anna and Orsini, Michael, eds. 2015. “Introduction to Critical Policy Studies.” In Handbook of Critical Policy Studies, ed. Fischer, Frank, Torgersen, Douglas, Durnova, Anna and Orsini, Michael. Cheltenham. Edward Elgar. E-book version.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gaucher, Megan. 2018. A Family Matter: Citizenship, Conjugal Relationships and Canadian Immigration Policy. Vancouver: UBC Press.Google Scholar
Haddow, Rodney. 2014. “Power Resources and the Canadian Welfare State: Unions, Partisanship and Interprovincial Differences in Inequality and Poverty Reduction.” Canadian Journal of Political Science 47 (4): 717–39.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haddow, Rodney. 2015. Comparing Quebec and Ontario: Political Economy and Public Policy at the Turn of the Millennium. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haddow, Rodney. 2018. “Are Canadian Provincial Tax Systems Becoming More Regressive? If So, in What Respects and Why?Canadian Public Policy 44 (1): 2540.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haddow, Rodney. 2020. “Partisan Politics and Fiscal Policy in the Canadian Provinces.” Canadian Public Administration 63 (3): 450–71.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hankivsky, Olena, ed. 2011. Health Inequities in Canada: Intersectional Frameworks and Practices. Vancouver: UBC Press.Google Scholar
Harrison, Kathryn. 2012. “A Tale of Two Taxes: The Fate of Environmental Tax Reform in Canada.” Review of Policy Research 29 (3): 383407.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harrison, Kathryn. 2013. “Federalism and Climate Policy Innovation: A Critical Reassessment.Canadian Public Policy 39 (S2): S95S108.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harrison, Kathryn. 2020. “Political Institutions and Supply Side Climate Politics: Lessons from Coal Ports in Canada and the US.” Global Environmental Politics 20 (4): 5172.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hedström, Peter and Swedberg, Richard. 1998. Social Mechanisms: An Analytical Approach to Social Theory. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heikkila, Tanya and Cairney, Paul. 2018. “Comparison of Theories of the Policy Process.” In Theories of the Policy Process, ed. Weible, Christopher M. and Sabatier, Paul A.. 4th ed. New York: Westview Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heinmiller, B. Timothy. 2013. “Advocacy Coalitions and the Alberta ‘Water Act.’Canadian Journal of Political Science 46 (3): 525–47.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Henstra, Daniel, ed. 2013. Multilevel Governance and Emergency Management in Canadian Municipalities. Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hindmarch, Suzanne, Orsini, Michael and Gagnon, Marilou. 2017. Conclusion in Seeing Red: HIV/AIDS and Public Policy in Canada, ed. Hindmarch, Suzanne, Orsini, Michael and Gagnon, Marilou. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Hoberg, George and Phillips, Jeffrey. 2011. “Playing Defence: Early Responses to Conflict Expansion in the Oil Sands Policy Subsystem.” Canadian Journal of Political Science 44 (3): 507–27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Horak, Martin and Young, Robert, eds. 2012. Sites of Governance: Multilevel Governance and Policy Making in Canada's Big Cities. Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Houle, David, Lachapelle, Eric and Purdon, Mark. 2015. “Comparative Politics of Sub-federal Cap-and-Trade: Implementing the Western Climate Initiative.” Global Environmental Politics 15 (3): 4973.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Howlett, Michael. 2000. “Managing the ‘Hollow State’: Procedural Policy Instruments and Modern Governance.” Canadian Public Administration 43 (4): 412–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Howlett, Michael. 2018. “Commentary on ‘Punching below Its Weight.’Canadian Public Administration 61 (3): 407–10.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jacobs, Alan M. 2011. Governing for the Long Term: Democracy and the Politics of Investment. Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jacques, Olivier. 2020. “Partisan Priorities under Fiscal Constraints in Canadian Provinces.” Canadian Public Policy 46 (4): 458–69.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johns, Carolyn. 2019. “Understanding Barriers to Green Infrastructure Policy and Stormwater Management in the City of Toronto: A Shift from Grey to Green or Policy Layering and Conversion?Journal of Environmental Planning and Management 62 (8): 1377–401.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jones, Michael D. and Radaelli, Claudio. 2015. “The Narrative Policy Framework: Child or Monster?Critical Policy Studies 9 (3): 339–55.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jones, Stephen. 2014. “Flirting with Climate Change: A Comparative Analysis of Subnational Governments in Canada and Australia.” Journal of Comparative Policy Analysis 16 (5): 424–40.Google Scholar
Karapin, Roger. 2020. “The Political Viability of Carbon Pricing: Policy Design and Framing in British Columbia and California.” Review of Policy Research 37 (2): 140–73.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Karimi, Sivan. 2016. Beyond the Welfare State: Canada and Australia. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kiss, Simon. 2014. “Where Did All the Baby Bottles Go? Risk Perception, Interest Groups, Media Coverage and Institutional Imperatives in Canada's Regulation of Bisphenol A.” Canadian Journal of Political Science 47 (4): 741–65.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lasswell, Harold D. 1958. Politics: Who Gets What, When, How. Cleveland: Meridian.Google Scholar
Lucas, Jack and Smith, Alison. 2019. “Multilevel Policy from the Municipal Perspective: A Pan-Canadian Survey.” Canadian Public Administration 62 (2): 270–93.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Macdonald, Douglas. 2020. Carbon Province, Hydro Province: The Challenge of Canadian Energy and Climate Federalism. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mahon, Rianne. 2013. “Childcare, New Social Risks and the New Politics of Redistribution in Ontario.” In Inequality and the Fading of Redistributive Politics, ed. Banting, Keith and Myles, John. Vancouver: UBC Press.Google Scholar
Mahon, Rianne, Anttonen, Anneli, Bergqvist, Christina, Brennan, Deborah and Hobson, Barbara. 2012. “Convergent Care Regimes? Childcare Arrangements in Australia, Canada, Finland and Sweden.” Journal of European Social Policy 22 (4): 419–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mahon, Rianne, Bergqvist, Christina and Brennan, Deborah. 2016. “Social Policy Change: Work-family Tensions in Sweden, Australia and Canada.” Social Policy & Administration 50 (2): 165–82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marchildon, Gregory P. 2019. “The Single-Tier Universality of Canadian Medicare.” In Universality and Social Policy in Canada, ed. Béland, Daniel, Marchildon, Gregory P. and Prince, Michael J.. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Martens, Linsay, McNutt, Kathleen and Rayner, Jeremy. 2015. “Power to the People? The Impacts and Outcomes of Energy Consultations in Saskatchewan and Nova Scotia.” Canadian Journal of Political Science 48 (1): 127.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McCoy, John S. 2018. Protecting Multiculturalism: Muslims, Security, and Integration in Canada. Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Millar, Heather, Lesch, Matthew and White, Linda A.. 2019. “Connecting Models of the Individual and Policy Change Processes: A Research Agenda.” Policy Sciences 50 (1): 97118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Montpetit, Eric. 2016. In Defense of Pluralism. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Montpetit, Eric, Allison, Christine Rothmayr and Engeli, Isabelle. 2016. “Has Simeon's Vision Prevailed among Canadian Public Policy Scholars?Canadian Journal of Political Science 49 (4): 763–85.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Myles, John. 2013. “Income Security for Seniors: System Maintenance and Policy Drift.” In Inequality and the Fading of Redistributive Politics, ed. Banting, Keith and Myles, John. Vancouver: UBC Press.Google Scholar
Noel, Alain. 2013. “Quebec's New Politics of Redistribution.” In Inequality and the Fading of Redistributive Politics, ed. Banting, Keith and Myles, John. Vancouver: UBC Press.Google Scholar
Noel, Alain. 2020. “The Politics of Minimum Income Protection in the Canadian Provinces.” Canadian Journal of Political Science 53 (2): 399420.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Olive, Andrea. 2014. Land, Stewardship and Legitimacy: Endangered Species Policy in Canada and the United States. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Paquet, Mireille. 2014. “The Federalization of Immigration and Integration in Canada.” Canadian Journal of Political Science 47 (3): 519–48.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Paquet, Mireille. 2015. “Bureaucrats as Immigration Policy-Maker: The Case of Subnational Immigration Activism in Canada 1990–2010.” Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 41 (11): 1815–35.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Paquet, Mireille. 2019. Province Building and the Federalization of Immigration in Canada. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Paquet, Mireille and Larios, Lindsay. 2018. “Venue Shopping and Legitimacy: Making Sense of Harper's Immigration Record.” Canadian Journal of Political Science 51 (4): 817–36.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pasolli, Kelly Erica. 2015. “Comparing Child Care Policy in the Canadian Provinces.” Canadian Political Science Review 9 (2): 6378 .Google Scholar
Pasolli, Lisa. 2015. Working Mothers and the Child Care Dilemma: A History of British Columbia's Social Policy. Vancouver: UBC Press.Google Scholar
Pischke, Erin C., Solomon, Barry, Wellstead, Adam, Aceredo, Alberto, Eastmond, Amarella, De Oliveira, Fernando, Coelho, Suani and Lucan, Oswaldo. 2019. “From Kyoto to Paris: Measuring Renewable Energy Policy Regimes in Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Mexico and the United States.” Energy Research & Social Sciences 50 (1): 8291.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Prentice, Susan and White, Linda A.. 2019. “Childcare Deserts and Distributional Disadvantage: The Legacies of Split Childcare Policies and Programs in Canada.” Journal of International and Comparative Social Policy 35 (1): 5974.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Purdon, Mark, Giuliano, Genevieve, Witcover, Julie, Murphy, Colin, Ziaja, Sonja, Kaiser, Colleen, Winfield, Mark, Séguin, Charles, Papy, Jacques and Fulton, Lewis. 2021. “Climate and Transportation Policy Sequencing in California and Quebec.” Review of Policy Research 38 (5): 596630.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rayner, Jeremy, Howlett, Michael and Wellstead, Adam. 2017. “Policy Mixes and Their Alignment over Time: Patching and Stretching in the Oil Sands Reclamation Regime.” Environmental Policy and Governance 27 (3): 472–83.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rheault, Ludovic. 2013. “Corporate Lobbying and Immigration Policies in Canada.” Canadian Journal of Political Science 46 (3): 691722.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roberts, Alasdair. 2018. “Is This a Club We Want to Join? Reflections on ‘Punching below Its Weight’ and ‘The Global Relevance of Canadian Public Administration.’Canadian Public Administration 61 (3): 416–19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scala, Francesca. 2019. Delivering Policy: The Contested Politics of Assisted Reproductive Technologies in Canada. Vancouver: UBC Press.Google Scholar
Scala, Francesca, Paterson, Stephanie and Richard-Nobert, Laurence. 2019. “The Gender Logic and Effects of Instrument Mixes: Implementing Eldercare Policy in Canada.” Policy and Society 38 (4): 554–71.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schwartz, Elizabeth. 2016. “Developing Green Cities: Explaining Variation in Canadian Green Building Policies.” Canadian Journal of Political Science 49 (4): 621–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schwartz, Elizabeth. 2019. “Autonomous Local Climate Change Policy: An Analysis of the Effect of Intergovernmental Relations among Subnational Governments.” Review of Policy Research 36 (1): 5074.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sheridan, Paul and Shankardess, Ketan. 2015. “The 2012 Cuts to Refugee Health Coverage in Canada: The Anatomy of a Policy Failure.” Canadian Journal of Political Science 48 (4): 905–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Simeon, Richard. 1976. “Studying Public Policy.” Canadian Journal of Political Science 9 (4): 548–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Simon, Christopher A. and Tatalovich, Raymond. 2014. “Party, Ideology and Deficits: Provincial Fiscal Policy and the Cameron Thesis 1966–2009.” Canadian Journal of Political Science 47 (1): 93112.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Skogstad, Grace. 2021. “Political Parties and Policy Change in Canadian Agricultural Marketing Institutions.” Journal of Comparative Policy Analysis 23 (5-6): 561–75.Google Scholar
Skogstad, Grace and Bakvis, Herman. 2020. “Conclusion: Taking Stock of Canadian Federalism.” In Canadian Federalism: Performance, Effectiveness, and Legitimacy, ed. Bakvis, Herman and Skogstad, Grace. 4th ed. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Skogstad, Grace and Whyte, Tanya. 2015. “Authority Contests, Power and Policy Paradigm Change: Explaining Developments in Grain Marketing Policy in Prairie Canada.” Canadian Journal of Political Science 48 (1): 79101.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Skogstad, Grace and Wilder, Matt. 2019. “Strangers at the Gate: The Role of Multidimensional Ideas, Policy Anomalies and Institutional Gatekeepers in Biofuel Policy Developments in the USA and European Union.” Policy Sciences 52 (3): 343–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Snow, Dave. 2016. “Measuring Parentage Policy in the Canadian Provinces: A Comparative Framework.” Canadian Public Administration 59 (1): 525.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stokes, Leah C. 2013. “The Politics of Renewable Energy Policies: The Case of Feed-in Tariffs in Ontario.” Canada, Energy Policy 56: 490500.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Teyassier, R. 2011. “The Organizational and Electoral Determinants of the Provincial Funding of Private Education in Canada: A Quintile Regression Analysis.” Canadian Journal of Political Science 44 (4): 829–57.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thompson, Debra and Wallner, Jennifer. 2011. “A Focusing Tragedy: Public Policy and the establishment of Afrocentric Education in Toronto.” Canadian Journal of Political Science 44 (4): 807–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Triadafilopoulos, Triadafilos. 2012. Becoming Multicultural: Immigration and the Politics of Membership in Canada and Germany. Vancouver: UBC Press.Google Scholar
Triadafilopoulos, Triadafilos, ed. 2013. Wanted and Welcome? Policies for Highly Skilled Immigrants in Comparative Perspective. New York: Springer.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tuohy, Carolyn Hughes. 2013. “Health Care Policy after Universality: Canada in Comparative Perspective.” In Inequality and the Fading of Redistributive Politics, ed. Banting, Keith and Myles, John. Vancouver: UBC Press.Google Scholar
Tuohy, Carolyn Hughes. 2018. Remaking Policy: Scale, Pace, and Political Strategy in Health Care Reforms. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tuohy, Carolyn Hughes. 2019. “Icon and Taboo: Single-Payer Politics in Canada and the US.” Journal of International and Comparative Social Policy 35 (1): 524.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Urquhart, Ian. 2018. Costly Fix: Power, Politics and Nature in the Tar Sands. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Wallner, Jennifer: 2014. Learning to School: Federalism and Public Schooling in Canada. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weible, Christopher M. 2018. “Introduction: The Scope and Focus of Policy Process Research and Theory.” In Theories of the Policy Process, ed. Weible, Christopher M. and Sabatier, Paul A.. 4th ed. New York: Westview Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weible, Christopher M. and Sabatier, Paul A., eds. 2018. Theories of the Policy Process. 4th ed. New York: Westview Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wellstead, Adam, Rayner, Jeremy and Howlett, Michael. 2016. “Alberta's Oil Sands Reclamation Policy Trajectory: The Role of Tense Layering, Policy Stretching, and Policy Patching in Long Term Policy Dynamics.” Journal of Environmental Planning and Management 59 (10): 1873–90.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, Linda A. 2012. “Must We All Be Paradigmatic? Social Investment Policies and Liberal Welfare States.” Canadian Journal of Political Science 45 (3): 657–83.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, Linda A. 2017. Constructing Policy Change: Early Childhood Education and Care in Liberal Welfare States. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, Linda A. and Friendly, Martha. 2012. “Public Funding, Private Delivery: States, Markets, and Early Childhood Education and Care in Liberal Welfare States—A Comparison of Australia, the UK, Quebec and New Zealand.” Journal of Comparative Policy Analysis: Research and Practice 14 (4): 292310.Google Scholar
White, Linda A. and Prentice, Susan. 2016. “Early Childhood Education and Care Reform in Canadian Provinces: Understanding the Role of Experts and Evidence in ECEC Policy Change in Canadian Provinces.” Canadian Public Administration 59 (1): 2444.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wilder, Matt. 2017. “Comparative Public Policy: Origins, Theories, New Directions.Policy Studies Journal 45 (S1): S47S66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Winfield, Mark and Macdonald, Douglas. 2020. “Federalism and Canadian Climate Change Policy.” In Canadian Federalism: Performance, Effectiveness, and Legitimacy, ed. Bakvis, Herman and Skogstad, Grace. 4th ed. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Winfield, Mark S. 2012. Blue-Green Province: The Environment and the Political Economy of Ontario. Vancouver: UBC Press.Google Scholar
Woroby, Tamara. 2015. “Immigration Reform in Canada and the United States: How Dramatic, How Different?American Review of Canadian Studies 45 (4): 430–50.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yanow, Dvora. 2003. “Interpretive Empirical Political Science: What Makes This Not a Subfield of Qualitative Methods.” Qualitative & Multi-method Research 1 (2): 913. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.998761.Google Scholar
Young, Robert and Tolley, Erin, eds. 2019. Immigrant Settlement Policy in Canadian Municipalities. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Table 1 The Scope and Methods of Studies of Canadian Public Policy