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Meijerink, Sander.
April 2008. Explaining continuity and change in international policies:
issue linkage, venue change, and learning on policies for the river
Scheldt estuary 1967-2005. Environment and Planning A, 40
(4): 848 - 66.
Abstract:
This
paper aims to assess the explanatory power and to explore the compatibility
of three major accounts of policy continuity and change in cross-border
policy domains: negotiation analysis (NA), the advocacy coalition
framework (ACF), and the punctuated-equilibrium (PE) framework. These
frameworks are used to analyze policies for the river Scheldt estuary
between 1967 and 2005. The estuary of the river Scheldt is situated
partly in the Belgian region of Flanders and partly in the Netherlands.
Major international policy issues in this estuary are the maritime
access to the port of Antwerp, water and sediment pollution, and
estuarine rehabilitation. It will be shown that the negotiations
on these issues are characterized by complex issue linkages, and
that NA does very well in explaining both deadlocks and international
policy agreement. However, unlike the ACF, NA does not specify how
actors come to define their interests. Moreover, we will argue that
learning across the prodevelopment Antwerp coalition and the cross-border
environmentalist coalition accounts for a gradual convergence of
Dutch and Flemish perceived interests. Finally, PE offers useful
complementary insights as Scheldt estuary policies cannot be understood
without addressing the interrelations between the processes of negotiation,
learning, the creation and enforcement of game rules, which have
been going on in different venues simultaneously.
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