jan - march 2021 live on youtube
youtube.com/LABOPPIUNIFESP
INTERNATIONAL PUBLIC POLICIES LABORATORY
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E VE NT COORD I NATOR
Osmany Porto de Oliveira Federal University of São Paulo - Unifesp CONVE NE RS
Osmany Porto De Oliveira — Federal University of São Paulo - Unifesp Leslie Pal — Hamad Bin Khalifa University Cecilia Osorio — Universidad Alberto Hurtado Christopher Walker — Australia and New Zealand School of Government David Dolowitz — University of Liverpool Magdalèna Hadjiisky — IEP — Strasbourg SP E AKE RS
Claire Dunlop — University of Exeter Eugene McCann — Simon Fraser University P RE SE NTE D BY
SU P P ORT
INTERNATIONAL PUBLIC POLICIES LABORATORY
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Summary CONFERENCE FOCUS.................................................................................14 ORGANIZATION.........................................................................................18 CONVENERS................................................................................................18 SPEAKERS...................................................................................................18 BOOK LAUNCH ..........................................................................................20 EVENT’S SESSIONS.....................................................................................27 Sessions dynamics.........................................................................................28 Instruction for Poster Sessions......................................................................28 Instructions for Poster Presenters..................................................................29 Instructions for Paper Presenters..................................................................30 WEBINARS..................................................................................................32 PROGRAMME.............................................................................................35 PANEL SESSIONS .......................................................................................38 ROUNDTABLE: Teaching and Researching Policy Diffusion in Latin America...38 PANEL 2 | Small States, Skilled Diplomacy and Policy Transfer.....................38 PANEL 3 | Capacity to Transfer: The Role of Individuals, Organizations and Systems on the Adoption and Internationalization of Public Policies.............39 PANEL 4 | Southern agency unpacked: exploring the mechanisms and effects of policy diffusion in the security domain..........................................................41 PANEL 5 | Policy Transfer and Social Network Analysis.................................42 PANEL 6 | Beyond Coercion, Emulation, Competition and Learning: The Frontiers of Causal Mechanisms in Research on Social Policy Diffusion.......................44 PANEL 7 | Policy diffusion and policy transfers in East Asia: new unexplored patterns?.......................................................................................................45
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PANEL 8 | Policy translation and translators.................................................47 PANEL 9 | Social Policy Diffusion.................................................................49 PANEL 12 | Geopolitics of Urban Policy Transfer...........................................50 PANEL 13 | Triangular Cooperation and Policy Transfer................................51 PANEL 14 | International Organizations and Development Cooperation.......52 PANEL 15 | Brazil and Policy Diffusion..........................................................54 PANEL 16 | Latin America and Policy Diffusion............................................55 POSTER SESSIONS AND AWARD ..............................................................56 Internationalization of Public Policies: an analysis of the transference of the Conditional Cash Transfer Program from Brazil to Peru (JUNTOS)...............56 Circulation of public policies in Colombia during the international sanitary emergency on Zika congenital syndrome....................................................... 56 Public Policy Diffusion: An analysis of conditioned income transfer programs from Brazil and the Dominican Republic.......................................................56 Internalization of Public Policies: Analysis of the transfer of Nutritional Food Security from Brazil to Peru ..........................................................................56 Policy diffusion in the field of Nutritional Food Security: a study case on Brazil and Uruguay.................................................................................................56 Land Value Capture in Porto Alegre: public policy formulation in light of policy diffusion.......................................................................................................56 Food and Nutrition Security in Dominican Republic.....................................57 CONCLUDING PLENARY............................................................................57 BRAZILIAN STYLE CELEBRATION............................................................58 Spotify playlist.............................................................................................. 58 Caipirinha.....................................................................................................58
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CONFERENCE PARTNERS This Conference is presented by CEBRAP In 1969 a group of professors expelled from the universities by the dictatorship founded The Brazilian Center of Analysis and Planning – CEBRAP to be a free thinking forum for production of knowledge in Brazil.
Global Center
Active for 50 years, Cebrap stands out in the national scene with research projects, publications and seminars marked by a multidisciplinary approach, academic rigor and impact on public debates. Cebrap carried out more than 500 research projects, worked with about 200 national and international partners and consolidated a position as a high—standard research center, reference in the production of frontier knowledge in the various human sciences, housing some of the country’s leading researchers and intellectuals and operating as a forum for debate on major national issues. Cebrap is a global research center which establishes partnerships with institutions, development agencies and civil associations
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from different countries around the world, such as UK, USA, Germany, France, India, China, Mexico, South Africa, among others. Recognized as the 40th best public policy think tank in the world, according to the University of Pennsylvania ranking (2018), Cebrap carries out impact research both by subsidizing the formulation of new policies and by contributing to the monitoring and evaluation of public actions. Multidisciplinary Research
Cebrap’s focus is the analysis of the Brazilian reality, with an approach that emphasizes comparative analysis and combines specialization and interdisciplinarity, in constant dialogue among the different theoretical and methodological perspectives of the areas of origin of its researchers: Sociology, Political Science, Demography, Law, Philosophy, History, Anthropology, Economics and Geography. Cebrap currently houses 41 permanent researchers and 140 associated researchers, 60 of them holding PhD degrees. This academic staff investigates several subjects: Democracy, Collective Action, Development, Innovation, Cities, Urban Mobility, Inequality, Population, Healthcare, Education, Violence, Human Rights, Gender, Race, Religion and Drug Policies. Most of the research projects aim help on the decision making process of public institutions, civil associations and private companies. Expertise in Research Methods
Cebrap is also known by its methodological skills, which uses both quantitative research, such as surveys, GIS and network analysis, as well as qualitative data, such as case studies, ethnographic techniques, interviews and focus groups. Furthermore, Cebrap develops data visualization projects and conducts thematic courses, methodological workshops and research technique training.
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Knowledge Diffusion
Cebrap publishes its research through different media, such as Novos Estudos, which is an interdisciplinary academic journal containing contemporary research; the Virtual Library, the compiling of video archives and articles produced by Cebrap; and the traditional Cebrap Seminars, for fueling discussions on Brazilian political and social reality. Experience and innovation
Cebrap has achieved a rare generational transition, functioning for decades as an incubator for new researchers, in professional and academic training programs at both national and international levels. The success of these initiatives can be gauged by the large number of researchers who have achieved prominent positions in universities, as well as at different levels of government. As a result of cross—generational exchanges, research teams at Cebrap combine the long and recognized experience of senior researchers and the vitality and new skills of the younger generation.
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SUPPORT
College of Public Policy
Hamad Bin Khalifa University Master of Public Policy
The Master of Public Policy (MPP) is a full—time two—year degree offered by Hamad Bin Khalifa University’s (HBKU) new college, the College of Public Policy (CPP). The program features a distinctive combination of interdisciplinarity, strong ethical foundations, entrepreneurship in public management, and innovation in policy making and design. Qatar has a strategic geographical position at the global crossroads of culture, business, and geopolitics. The country is located at the center of a region that requires leaders who can manage multi—faceted relationships that span different public policy making dynamics and command a wide range of skills. Information available at www.hbku.edu.qa/en/cpp PARTNERS INTERNATIONAL PUBLIC POLICIES LABORATORY
The Laboratory of International Public Policies (Laboppi) is an academic program involving professors and students on the Osasco Campus of the Federal University of São Paulo.
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The program is coordinated by Professors Osmany Porto de Oliveira, Karen Fernandez Costa and Fabiana Rita Dessotti. Laboppi’s overall mission is to be a locus of research production, dialogue and interaction between academia, governments and non—governmental bodies, and the dissemination of knowledge. With a global reach, the Laboppi YouTube channel has more than 70 videos about policy transfer, diffusion, and circulation, as well as international public policies and development cooperation. The program’s activities are the: 1. Production of didactic, technical, and scientific material; 2. Construction of databases; 3. Conducting of interviews; 4. Recording of podcasts; 5. Producing of policy briefings 6. Organization of events; and 7. Research.
Traditionally recognized as an institution specialized in health sciences, Unifesp is responsible for the training of qualified human resources and the development of scientific research in health. Its core is the Escola Paulista de Medicina (EPM), whose foundation dates back to 1933 and was supported by private funds and government subsidies until its federalization in 1956. With the enactment of Law No. 8957 in 1994, EPM turned into a federal university, keeping the courses in Medical Science, Nursing, Biomedical Sciences, Speech Therapy and Ophthalmic Technology — which now integrates the Health Technologies. From 2005, with the support of local governments and resources from the expansion of the federal program, Unifesp implemented new units in cities near Sao Paulo. New campuses – located in Santos, Diadema, Guarulhos, São José dos Campos and Osasco - took responsibility for organizing knowledge areas that include, among others, the Exact Sciences, the Humanities, Environmental Sciences and Applied Social Sciences. The Escola Paulista de Medicina and the Escola
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Paulista de Enfermagem are located at São Paulo Campus, representing the historical core of the institution. On the way to its consolidation as a full university, Unifesp has expanded its faculty by the admission of professionals holding at least a PhD degree and has begun offering new undergraduate courses based on modern pedagogical projects and allowing for greater curricular flexibility. For 48 out of the total of 55 undergraduate courses currently available, access is linked to the Unified Selection System (SiSU), which sets the approval criteria on the score obtained through the National High School Exam (ENEM). This measure, which aims at democratizing access to higher education, is complemented by booking 50% of vacancies to students with greater economic vulnerability. Graduate programs - created since 1970 - form teachers and researchers with high level of technical and scientific competences, assigning Unifesp the greatest scientific output indicators per teacher, nationwide. Among the numerous training programs for human resources developed by the institution, specialized courses – presential and distance - allow the continued training of hundreds of professionals in their specialties. Social projects - including the Xingu Project, the Open University of the Third Age and the Centre for Public Policy – cater for interaction between academic knowledge and society as an important instrument of social transformation. At the international level, Unifesp - as a signatory of important agreements of international cooperation - promotes the exchange of students and faculty and participates in collaborative research networks. Thus, the multicampus geography of Unifesp, with six campuses and two being implanted in the state macro-metropolitan area, distributed in three metropolitan regions (São Paulo, Santos and São José dos Campos), let us compose a university network in an area of 29 million inhabitants, the largest urban density in the southern hemisphere.
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This strategic condition leads to a high potential for education, research and extension activities which can be directed to major national and international issues.
Edward Elgar Publishing is a leading independent academic and professional publisher with a strong focus on the social sciences and legal fields. We publish 400 book and journal titles annually and have successfully created a prestigious list of over 7,000 titles. Find out more here: www.e-elgar.com/about/about-us/.
Together Routledge and CRC Press are the world’s leading academic publisher in the Humanities, Social Sciences, and STEM. We publish thousands of books and key online products each year, serving scholars, instructors, and professional communities worldwide. Find out more here: www.routledge.com/corporate/about-us.
Palgrave McMillan publishes award—winning research which changes the world across the humanities, social sciences and business for academics, professionals and librarians. We offer authors and readers the very best in academic content whilst also supporting the community with innovative new formats and tools. With offices in London, New York and Shanghai, and sales teams across 50 countries, we have a global reach. As part of Springer Nature, we are proud to uphold an unbroken tradition of over 170 years of academic publishing. Find out more here: www.palgrave.com/gp/about-us
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Welcome Osmany Porto de Oliveira Coordinator of ICPDDC Welcome to the II International Conference on Policy Diffusion and Development Cooperation! For the third time, the policy diffusion and development cooperation communities are coming together to share their most recent research. This event started as a workshop at Cebrap in 2016 with just a few participants. Two years later, the conference was held in São Paulo with more than 250 participants. The conference has become the largest international event on policy diffusion and development cooperation. This year, the II International Conference on Policy Diffusion and Development Cooperation was scheduled to take place at the end of May. We received more than 100 proposals from very highly qualified researchers. However, due to the outbreak of COVID-19, we unfortunately had to reschedule the event. At first, we thought that it would be possible to prepare an in—person conference. However, with the continuation of the pandemic and the current increasing number of cases around the world and Brazil, we have decided that it will not be possible to host a physical meeting in the short— to medium—term. These difficult circumstances, which have affected the entire world, have been a huge challenge for the conference. Recognizing the value of sharing knowledge on policy diffusion and development cooperation, we believe it is really important understood to maintain the conference. This has meant ten additional months of work in addition to all that’s been prepared since 2019. For several weeks, we worked hard to reschedule and design an innovative form of international academic conference within the context of this global pandemic. We had no prior experience in hosting a digital event and the first version of the conference was designed to be held in person.
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It was a learning experience, and we are very happy with the result! More than 70 participants from all over the world will join in more than 20 sessions. This is going to be the first event of this kind in our area of research. The International Conference on Policy Diffusion has become a global hub for academics to share their groundbreaking research and work in progress. This is a pluralistic space of discussion, which welcomes scholars from the most varied epistemological and ontological perspectives about how policies travel and countries cooperate. It is also a venue where global South and North academics can share their findings and engage in mutual learning. Our main purpose is to foster the production of knowledge production and innovation and further our interpretations of policy diffusion and development cooperation. We are happy to welcome you to this wonderful experience. This event would not have been possible without the assistance of various people and organizations. First, we would like to thank the College of Public Policy of Hamad Bin Khalifa University and its Dean Professor Leslie Pal for supporting the conference. Professor Leslie Pal has been a key figure who has offered advice on various stages of this event. Second, we also would like to thank the Brazilian Center of Analysis and Planning and its staff for hosting the conference, as well as all other conference partners: Unifesp, Laboppi, Routledge, Edward Elgar, and Palgrave. Third, we owe our gratitude to all our colleagues who have worked on the convening this event, the scientific committee, panel organizers and organization staff. They have been invaluable partners. Their commitment to the conference during these turbulent times has been fundamental to making this event happen. Finally, we need to thank all our paper and poster presenters for their trust in the conference and our work. I hope you will have productive and effective discussions, as well as enjoyable moments during the next few months. Certainly, a lot of food for thought for future policy diffusion and development cooperation research will come out of this event.
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CONFERENCE FOCUS The fall of the Berlin Wall and the progressive intensity of globalization in the nineties opened up an unprecedented exchange of policy ideas, knowledge and models among governments all over the world. Different research traditions in social sciences followed this empirical movement providing important explanations for these processes. The II International Conference on Policy Diffusion and Development Cooperation is an eclectic global meeting that brings together researchers from all over the world to discuss the various dynamics of these policies in movement. The literature on the international circulation of public policies (Stone, Porto de Oliveira, & Pal, 2019; Porto de Oliveira & Pimenta de Faria, 2017) informs us that these days such processes occur in many different ways (Hadjiisky, Pal, & Walker, 2017), involving a plethora of agents (Pal, 2012; Stone, 2008), with diverse narratives (Cabral, Shankland, Favareto, & Costa Vaz, 2013), operating in multiple arenas (Baker & Walker, 2019), with unequal power relationships (Dolowitz, Plugaru, and Saurugger 2019), within dynamics of competition and cooperation (Mawdsley, 2017), following different directions (Osorio Gonnet, 2018) and geographies (Milhorance, 2018) in distinct time periods (Peck & Theodore, 2015; Wood, 2015), generating heterogeneous effects including bricolages (Stone, 2017) and translations (Hassenteufel, Benamouzig, Minonzio, & Robelet, 2017). In spite of this mosaic of knowledge produced and accumulated over the past few years, there are still past and present empirical settings, theoretical questions and methodological issues that require deeper study in order to help us to explain these phenomena with greater precision. Among the most cutting—edge questions in the field are: what is the influence of far—right groups and leaders, as well as the post—truth context of policy transfer? How does state capacity affect policy transfers?
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In which ways does the geopolitical distribution of power affect the international “policy market”? Which causal mechanisms facilitate or constrain policy diffusion, beyond coercion, learning, competition and emulation? What are the implications of the contemporary changes in South—South cooperation on policy transfers? How can social network analysis improve our understanding of policy circulation? What is the impact of the proliferation of social policy innovation labs on policy transfers? How can regionalisms facilitate or constrain policy diffusion? What is the role of digital technology and internet knowledge hubs, learning communities, and transfer platforms in the circulation of governmental and administration ideas, models and techniques? These are some of the issues that the II International Conferences on Policy Diffusion and Development Cooperation will address. In this event we expect to move forward and innovate in this debate, producing front—line discussions and new research partnerships. This is a participatory and collaborative space where both Southern and Northern scholars will discuss issues, concepts and methods to produce knowledge and improve our understanding of policy diffusion and development cooperation. Our first meeting was held in 2016 at the Brazilian Center of Analysis and Planning (Cebrap) as a seminar, and this has become a biannual conference in partnership with the Federal University of São Paulo (Unifesp) and the International Public Policy Laboratory (Laboppi). The conference brings together major experts in political science, sociology, public policy, international relations, urban studies, and geography to discuss how policies travel and governments cooperate. The last edition occurred in 2018 with more than 270 participants from countries all over the world, and we have been building a global network that now unites more than 400 researchers interested in this topic.
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References Baker, T., & Walker, C. (2019). Public Policy Circulation. Edward Elgar. Cabral, L., Shankland, A., Favareto, A., & Costa Vaz, A. (2013). Brazil—Africa Agricultural Cooperation Encounters: Drivers, Narratives and Imaginaries of Africa and Development. IDS Bulletin, 44(4), 53–68. Dolowitz, D. P., Plugaru, R., & Saurugger, S. (2019). The process of transfer: The micro—influences of power, time and learning. Public Policy and Administration, 0952076718822714. Hadjiisky, M., Pal, L. A., & Walker, C. (2017). Public Policy Transfer: Micro—Dynamics and Macro—Effects. Edward Elgar. Hassenteufel, P., Benamouzig, D., Minonzio, J., & Robelet, M. (2017). Policy Diffusion and Translation: The Case of Evidence— based Health Agencies in Europe. NOVOS ESTUDOS – CEBRAP, 36(01), 77–96. Mawdsley, E. (2017). Development geography 1: Cooperation, competition and convergence between ‘North’ and ‘South’. Progress in Human Geography, 41(1), 108–117. Milhorance, C. (2018). New Geographies of Global Policy—Making: South–South Networks and Rural Development Strategies. 245. Osorio Gonnet, C. (2018). A Comparative Analysis of the Adoption of Conditional Cash Transfers Programs in Latin America. Journal of Comparative Policy Analysis: Research and Practice, 1–17. Pal, L. A. (2012). Frontiers of Governance: The OECD and Global Public Management Reform. Palgrave McMillan. Peck, J., & Theodore, N. (2015). Fast Policy: Experimental Statecraft at the Thresholds of Neoliberalism. University of Minnesota Press.
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Porto de Oliveira, O., & Pimenta de Faria, C. A. (2017). Research Traditions and the State of the Discipline in Brazil. Novos Estudos – CEBRAP, 36(01), 13–34. Stone, D. (2008). Global Public Policy, Transnational Policy Communities, and Their Networks. Policy Studies Journal, 36(1), 19–38. Stone, D. (2017). Understanding the transfer of policy failure: Bricolage, experimentalism and translation. Policy & Politics, 45(1), 55–70. Stone, D., Porto de Oliveira, O., & Pal, L. A. (2019). Transnational policy transfer: The circulation of ideas, power and development models. Policy and Society, 1–18. Wood, A. (2015). Multiple Temporalities of Policy Circulation: Gradual, Repetitive and Delayed Processes of BRT Adoption in South African Cities: MULTIPLE TEMPORALITIES OF POLICY CIRCULATION. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 39(3), 568–580.
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ORGANIZATION OSMANY PORTO DE OLIVEIRA EVENT COORDINATOR AND CONVENOR Federal University of São Paulo
CONVENERS Osmany Porto de Oliveira - Unifesp Information available here. Leslie Pal - Hamad Bin Khalifa University Information available here. Cecilia Osorio - Alberto Hurtado University Information available here. Christopher Walker - Australia And New Zealand School Of Government Information available here David Dolowitz - University Of Liverpool Information available here. Magdalena Hadjiisky - Iep – Strasbourg Information available here.
SPEAKERS Claire Dunlop - University of Exeter Information available here. Eugene McCann - Simon Fraser University Information available here.
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SCIENTIFIC COMMITTEE Patrick Hassenteufel (Sciences Po Versailles) Raul Pacheco-Vega (Flacso-Mexico) Giulia Romano (University of Duisburg-Essen)
PANEL ORGANIZERS Alex Moulis (Australia and New Zealand School of Government - ANZSOG) Amanda Shriwise (University of Bremen) Camila Saraiva (Federal University of Rio de Janeiro) Cecilia Osorio Gonnet (Universidade Alberto Hurtado – Chile) Christopher Walker (Australia and New Zealand School of Government) Danilo Marcondes Neto (Brazilian War College-ESG) Giovanni Agostinis (Pontificia Universidad Católica – Chile) Giulia C. Romano (University of Duisburg-Essen) Johanna Kuhlmann (University of Bremen) Juliana Costa (Federal University of São Paulo/Articulação Sul) Kidjie Saguin (National University of Singapore) Leslie A. Pal (Universidade Hamad Bin Khalifa) Manuela Trindade Viana (PUC-Rio) Melissa Pomeroy (Articulação Sul) Michelle Morais de Sá e Silva (The University of Oklahoma) Monica Herz (PUC-Rio) Natália Koga (Ipea) Osmany de Oliveira (Federal University of São Paulo - Unifesp) Patrick Hassenteufel (Universidade de Versalhes Paris-Saclay) Ulrike Zeigermann (University of Malsburg)
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BOOK LAUNCH Find out more about our discounts for the books on exhibit at our Conference Book Launch.
Handbook of Policy Transfer, Diffusion and Circulation authors Edited by Osmany Porto de Oliveira, Assistant Professor, Department of International Relations, Federal University of SĂŁo Paulo (Unifesp), Brazil
Pragmatism and Political Crisis Management Principle and Practical Rationality During the Financial Crisis authors Christopher Ansell, University of California, Berkeley, US and Martin Bartenberger, RATIS, Germany
Public Policy Circulation Arenas, Agents and Actions authors Edited by Tom Baker, School of Environment, University of Auckland, New Zealand, Christopher Walker, Australia and New Zealand School of Government, Australia
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A Modern Guide to Public Policy authors Edited by Giliberto Capano, Professor of Political Science and Public Policy, Department of Political and Social Sciences, University of Bologna, Italy and Michael Howlett, Burnaby Mountain Professor and Canada Research Chair, Department of Political Science, Simon Fraser University, Canada
Shaping Policy Agendas The Micro-Politics of Economic International Organizations authors Edited by David Dolowitz, Professor, Department of Politics, University of Liverpool, UK, MagdalĂŠna Hadjiisky, Senior Lecturer in Political Science and Romuald Normand, Professor of Sociology, Faculty of Social Sciences, UniversitĂŠ de Strasbourg, France
Critical Policy Discourse Analysis authors Edited by Nicolina Montesano Montessori, Associate Professor, Research Centre for Learning and Innovation, HU University of Applied Sciences Utrecht, the Netherlands, Michael Farrelly, Lecturer in English Language, Department of English, Creative Writing and American Studies, University of Hull and Jane Mulderrig, Senior Lecturer in Applied Linguistics, School of English, University of Sheffield, UK
Handbook of Research Methods and Applications in Comparative Policy Analysis authors Edited by B. Guy Peters, Maurice Falk Professor of Government, University of Pittsburgh, US and Guillaume Fontaine, Professor, Department of Public Affairs, FLACSO, Ecuador
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Advanced Introduction to Public Policy authors B. Guy Peters, Maurice Falk Professor of Government, University of Pittsburgh, US
Beyond Public Policy: A Public Action Languages Approach authors Peter Kevin Spink, Centre for Public Administration and Government Studies, Getulio Vargas Foundation, SĂŁo Paulo, Brazil
Public Governance Paradigms: Competing and Co-Existing authors Jacob Torfing, Professor, Department of Social Sciences and Business, Roskilde University, Denmark, and Professor, Nord University, Norway, Lotte Bøgh Andersen, Professor, Department of Political Science, Aarhus University, Carsten Greve, Professor, Department of Organization, Copenhagen Business School, Frederiksberg, Kurt Klaudi Klausen, Professor, Department of Political Science and Public Management, University of Southern Denmark, Denmark
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Latin America and Policy Diffusion | From Import to Export authors Osmany Porto de Oliveira, Cecilia Osorio Gonnet Sergio Montero Cristiane Kerches da Silva Leite
New Geographies of Global PolicyMaking | South-South Networks and Rural authors Carolina Milhorance
The Routledge Handbook of Global Public Policy and Administration authors Thomas R. Klassen, Denita Cepiku , T. J. Lah
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Learning from the West?: Policy Transfer and Programmatic Change in the Communist Successor Parties of East Central Europe authors Dan Hough, William E. Paterson, Sloam James
Social Development and Social Work | Learning from Africa authors Alice K. Butterfield , Tasse Abye
World-Regional Social Policy and Global Governance | New Research and Policy Agendas in Africa, Asia, Europe and Latin America authors Bob Deacon, Maria Cristina Macovei, Luk Van Langenhove, Nicola Yeates
Aid Power and Politics authors Iliana OliviĂŠ, Aitor PĂŠrez
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Policy Transfer and Norm Circulation | Towards an Interdisciplinary and Comparative Approach authors Laure Delcour, Elsa Tulmets
Russia’s Impact on EU Policy Transfer to the Post-Soviet Space authors Esther Ademmer
Policy Transfer and Learning in Public Policy and Management | International Contexts, Content and Development edited by Peter Carroll, Richard Common
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International Policy Diffusion and Participatory Budgeting Ambassadors of Participation, International Institutions and Transnational Networks authors Porto de Oliveira, Osmany
Conditional Cash Transfer Programs in Ecuador and Chile The Role of Policy Diffusion authors Osorio Gonnet, Cecilia
Changing Urban Renewal Policies in China Policy Transfer and Policy Learning under Multiple Hierarchies authors Romano, Giulia C.
Transnational Policy Entrepreneurs Bureaucratic Influence and Knowledge Circulation in Global Cooperation authors Zeigermann, Ulrike
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Event’s Sessions
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Webinars
Panel sessions
Posters Sessions
We will organize one webinar every two months to keep the network alive and the conference as well.
The panels will take place from January to March through a video communication platform and all sessions will be recorded. Each panel will have a purpose. This can be the simple intention to stimulate debate with discussions or a more complex aspiration such as preparing a publication.
Posters are the work presented by undergraduate students, on their first findings and their very first step into research in policy diffusion.
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Concluding plenary A concluding webinar will close the Conference in March, 2021.
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Brazilian Style Celebration A Brazilian music playlist will be available on Spotify and different recipes for caipirinhas will be shared to provide a Brazilian experience for all.
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Sessions dynamics
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All sessions will be broadcast on the Laboppi YouTube Channel at the following link: https://www.youtube.com/ LABOPPIUNIFESP
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Anyone can watch sessions.
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Questions will be made directly via YouTube chat
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Videos will be posted immediately after the sessions and will be available on the Laboppi YouTube Channel
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In order to facilitate your participation, subscribe to the Channel and activate the notification ring bell.
Instructions for Poster Sessions •
Streamyard will be used for poster discussion sessions
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Only poster presenters and discussants will be participating in the Streamyard room.
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Participants in the poster discussion session will receive the link for the session beforehand.
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Rooms will open 30 minutes in advance for testing
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Participants will be required to enter the room 30 minutes before the session.
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Discussers will have up to 10 minutes to present their comments to the poster authors
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Questions will be collected from the audience
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At the end of the session, the jury will inform the winner of the Best Poster Award.
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Instructions for poster presenters •
The posters will be presented in English in two formats, text and video. The posters will be discussed with experts in a specific session. A poster award will be conceded by the jury for the best poster presented at the conference.
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The deadline for sending the texts and videos for the posters to policydiffusion@gmail.com will be January 15, 2021. Here are the guidelines for each format:
Text: • The participants should send a PDF document of at most 1,500 words, presenting the main information about the academic work (ex: objectives, research problem, concepts, discussion of the results, conclusion, and references). The document needs to indicate the name of the work and the name(s) and institutional affiliation(s) of the author(s). Images and graphics may be included in this document as well as other elements that the author(s) think(s) pertinent. Video: • The poster presentation will consist of a 4 to 6—minute video containing the information in the written text. The participants can use a slide presentation in the video. A specific section will be organized for the presentation and discussion of the posters during the conference.
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Instructions for paper presenters •
Streamyard will be used for panel sessions
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Only paper presenters, discussers and moderators will be participating in the Streamyard room.
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Participants of the panel session will receive the link for the session beforehand.
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Rooms will open 30 minutes before for testing
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Participants will be required to enter the room 30 minutes before the session.
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Paper presenters who wish to use Powerpoint, will be responsible for managing their own presentations.
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Paper presenters who wish to use Powerpoint, will be required to send their presentations to policydiffusion@ gmail.com two days before their session.
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Paper presenters will have from 12—15 minutes to present their papers.
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Questions will be sent via YouTube chat.
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We kindly ask that those asking questions write their names, institutions, and countries.
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Sessions will last up to two hours.
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Participants must send the consent form for the use of their images by January 11, 2021.
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Participants must submit their complete papers by January 15th, 2021
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Participants interested in having their papers published in the Conference book must send the final version of their papers by March 22, 2021, following the guidelines below
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Conference Publication Guidelines
Please read carefully the instructions below in order to ensure the publication of your paper in the conference eBook. The final version of your papers must be sent to your panel coordinator and to policydiffusion@gmail.com. Panels can opt to have the papers published in the conference eBook. Authors must be responsible for reviewing and proofreading their own texts. There will be no copyediting services. • Only papers in English are accepted; •
Font: Arial – 12;
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Space: 1.15;
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Length: Max 8,000 Words – including references. Papers with more than 8,000 words won’t be eligible for the publication;
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Layout: Normal (2,5 superior; 2,5 inferior; 3 left, 3 right);
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References style: Harvard-Elsevier;
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Use only footnotes;
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Only documents in word format will be accepted
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Save your article file as follows: panel_number_title_last— name-author (Ex. Panel_1_Policy Diffusion and Development Cooperation_Porto.docx)
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Deadline to submit the final version of the paper for the publication is March 22nd, 2021
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Webinars Three webinars were organized as pre-conference events to prepare for our discussions. Find out more about the webinars here:
I Webinar: Policy Diffusion and Global Health in times of Covid—19 (July 6th, 2020) moderator:
Osmany Porto de Oliveira (Federal University of São Paulo - Unifesp) speakers:
Leslie A. Pal (College of Public Policy - Hamad Bin Khalifa University) Olivier Nay (University of Paris 1 - Panthéon Sorbonne) discussant:
Cecilia Osorio Gonnett (Universidad Alberto Hurtado) watch it at:
https://youtu.be/qPilhoFhbRE
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II Webinar: Latin America and Policy Diffusion (September 2nd, 2020) moderator:
Raul Pacheco-Vega (Flacso-Mexico) speakers:
Osmany Porto de Oliveira (Federal University of São Paulo – Unifesp) Cecilia Osorio Gonnett (Universidad Alberto Hurtado) discussant:
Jessica Bensa (Puc-Peru) watch it at:
https://youtu.be/yrAhMGC725M
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III Webinar: Public Policy Responses to Fight against Covid—19 in Brazil (November 11th, 2020) moderator:
Osmany Porto de Oliveira (Federal University of São Paulo — Unifesp) speakers:
Natália Koga (Institute for Applied Economic Research — Ipea) Rômulo Paes (Oswaldo Cruz Foundation — Fiocruz) Danielle Hanna Rached (Getulio Vargas Foundation — FGV) watch it at:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=1IfjdQRi5_I&t=5s
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Programme TIMETABLE – International Conference on Policy Diffusion and
Development Cooperation
Panel
date
time (gmt)
jan./27
16:00 - 18:00 gmt
jan./28
19:00 - 21:00 gmt
Panel 16: Latin America and Policy Diffusion
feb/02
17:00 - 19:00 gmt
Panel 14.1: International Organizations and Development Cooperation
feb/03
14:00 - 16:00 gmt
Poster Session and Award
feb/04
10:00 - 12:00 gmt
Panel 2: Small States, Skilled Diplomacy and Policy Transfer
feb/04
13:00 - 15:00 gmt
Panel 13.1: Triangular Cooperation and Policy Transfer
feb/05
14:00 - 16:00 gmt
Panel 6.1: Beyond Coercion, Emulation, Competition and Learning: The Frontiers of Causal Mechanisms in Research on Social Policy Diffusion
feb/05
16:00 - 18:00 gmt
Panel 8.1: Policy translation and translators
feb/05
18:00 - 20:00 GMT
Roundtable: Teaching and Researching Policy Diffusion in Latin America
Panel 8.2: Policy translation and translators
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17:00 - 19:00 gmt
Panel 14:.2 International Organizations and Development Cooperation
11:00 - 13:00 gmt
Panel 3.1: Capacity to Transfer: The Role of Individuals, Organizations and Systems on the Adoption and Internationalization of Public Policies
feb/11
13:30 - 15:30 gmt
Panel 3.2: Capacity to Transfer: The Role of Individuals, Organizations and Systems on the Adoption and Internationalization of Public Policies
feb/11
Panel 3.3: Capacity to Transfer: The Role of Individuals, Organizations 22:00 - 00:00 gmt and Systems on the Adoption and Internationalization of Public Policies
feb/09
feb/11
feb/12
14:00 - 16:00 gmt
Panel 6.2: Beyond Coercion, Emulation, Competition and Learning: The Frontiers of Causal Mechanisms in Research on Social Policy Diffusion
feb/18
19:00 - 21:00 gmt
Panel 5.1: Policy Transfer and Social Network Analysis
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feb/19
16:00 - 18:00 gmt
Panel 9: Social Policy Diffusion
feb/19
18:30 - 20:30 gmt
Panel 15: Brazil and Policy Diffusion
feb/25
13:00 - 15:00 gmt
Panel 13.2: Triangular Cooperation and Policy Transfer
feb/25
19:00 - 21:00 gmt
Panel 5.2: Policy Transfer and Social Network Analysis
mar./04
09:00 - 11:00 gmt
Panel 7.1: Policy diffusion and policy transfers in East Asia: new unexplored patterns?
mar./11
11:00 - 13:00 gmt
Panel 7.2: Policy diffusion and policy transfers in East Asia: new unexplored patterns?
mar./16
12:00 - 14:00 gmt
Panel 12: Geopolitics of Urban Policy Transfer
mar./18
13:00 - 15:00 gmt
Panel 4: Southern agency unpacked: exploring the mechanisms and effects of policy diffusion in the security domain
mar./22
16:30 - 17:00 gmt
Conference Closing
mar./22
17:00 - 18:30 gmt
Concluding Plenary
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Panel sessions Roundtable
Teaching and Researching Policy Diffusion in Latin America date: 27 january 2021 time: 16:00 — 18:00 GMT discussant: Cecilia Osorio (Universidad Alberto Hurtado), Raul
Pacheco-Vega (Flacso-Mexico) and Osmany Porto (Universidade Federal de São Paulo — Unifesp)
Panel 2
Small States, Skilled Diplomacy and Policy Transfer date: 4 February 2021 time: 10:00 — 12:00 GMT moderator: Osmany Porto (Universidade Federal de São Paulo
— Unifesp) discussant:
Leslie Pal (Hamad Bin Khalifa University)
Economic and Policy Diversifications in The Gulf Cooperation Council States: Small States, Fragmented Interests, Skilled Diplomacies Evren Tok and Abdullah Kaya (Hamad Bin Khalifa University)
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Panel 3
Capacity to Transfer: The Role of Individuals, Organizations and Systems on the Adoption and Internationalization of Public Policies S ESS I O N 3.1
date: 11 FEBRUARY 2021 time: 11:00 — 13:00 GMT
Natália Koga (Institute for Applied Economic Research — Ipea) discussant: Osmany Porto de Oliveira (Federal University of São Paulo — Unifesp) moderator:
Transnational Networks and the Domestic Social and Labor Policy Cycle in the European Union: A Case Study Anna Malandrino (University of Bologna)
Capacity to Policy Transfer and the Role of Individuals in post—communist countries: A case from Kazakhstan Dr. Aray Ilyassova—Schoenfeld (Nazarbayev Fund)
The dissemination and implementation of cultural rights worldwide: from “insurrectional actors” to “programmatic actors” ? A comparison of Brazilian, French and South African cases
Lionel Arnaud, Julie Sarah Lourau Alves da Silva, Leslie Banks and al. (Laboratoire des Sciences Sociales du Politique — Sc Po Toulouse / Université Toulouse 3)
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School Feeding Policies: the role of Brazil in the global debate and international actions Fernanda Castilhos França de Vasconcellos and Catia Grisa (Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul - UFRGS) S ESS I O N 3.2
date: 11 FEBRUARY 2021 time: 13:30 — 15:30 GMT moderator:
Osmany Porto (Federal University of São Paulo
- Unifesp) Natália Koga (Institute for Applied Economic Research - Ipea) discussant:
Knowledge battles at the World Bank: How institutional activists introduced the norm of participation into international development policy Olivier Nay (Université Paris 1 - Panthéon-Sorbonne)
Policy Transfer and State Capacity: An Introduction
Osmany Porto de Oliveira (Federal University of São Paulo Unifesp) and Natália Koga (Institute for Applied Economic Research - Ipea)
Will or obligation? Policy Transfer and the role of the World Bank in the case of RN Sutentável
Bárbara Maia Lima Madeira Pontes (Institute of Political Science, University of Brasília) S ESS I O N 3. 3
date: 11 FEBRUARY 2021 time: 22:00 — 00:00 GMT
Natália Koga (Institute for Applied Economic Research — Ipea) discussant: Osmany Porto (Universidade Federal de São Paulo — Unifesp) moderator:
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Academics in Public Office: A Study of Academic Administrative Entrepreneurs (AAEs) as Agents of Policy Transfer in Indonesia’s Administrative Reform Ario Wicaksono (Universitas Gadjah Mada, Indonesia)
The influence of the European Central Bank on the diffusion of austere fiscal policies and the accumulation of public debt across Europe Natalia Poiatti
Panel 4
Southern agency unpacked: exploring the mechanisms and effects of policy diffusion in the security domain date: 18 MARCH 2021 time: 13:00 — 15:00 GMT moderator: Professor Danilo Marcondes de Souza Neto (Escola
Superior de Guerra — ESG) discussant: Professor Monica Herz (IRI/PUC-Rio)
The travelling policemen: the Koban system and its circulation between Japan, Brazil and Central America Danilo Marcondes de Souza Neto (Escola Superior de Guerra - ESG)
Militarization, citizen security, counterinsurgent order: police cooperation and the expansion of public security agenda in Latin America Manuela Trindade Viana (IRI/PUC-Rio)
Assessing defense cooperation in South America: How did the South American Defense Council act? Thales Leonardo de Carvalho
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Policy mobilities and the development of security policies in a Brazilian city: Exploring the rise and fall of ‘Pact for Life’ in Recife Trevor Jones and Mozart Fazito (Cardiff University)
Overlapping agency in the security sector reform of Haiti? An analysis of key actors and processes
João Fernando Finazzi (Pontifícia Universidade Católica de Minas Gerais — PUC—MG) Panel 5
Policy Transfer and Social Network Analysis S ESS I O N 5.1
date: 18 FEBRUARY 2021 time: 19:00 — 21:00 GMT moderator and discussant: Christopher Walker (Australia and
New Zealand School of Government - ANZSOG)
Language Communities and Diffusion
Zachary Elkins (University of Texas at Austin) Participation TBC
Knowledge Transfer in Global Gender Programmes: Applying the Actor—Network Theory (ANT) to Policy Diffusion Studies Laura Rahm
Policy Diffusion Through the Twitterverse: Does More Data Give Us More Insight? Revisiting Arctic Development Twitter Networks Jennifer Spence Participation TBC
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The determinants of predisposition for the participatory policy change: stakeholder participation can contribute to change administrative burden in social security policy?
Vanessa de Souza Fraga and Silvia Maria Vale Mendes CamĂľes S ESS I O N 5.2
date: 25 FEBRUARY 2021 time: 19:00 — 21:00 GMT moderator: Zachary Elkins (University of Texas at Austin) discussant: Alex
Moulis (Australia and New Zealand School of Government - ANZSOG)
Understanding Policy Transfer Through Social Network Analysis
Dr. Christopher Walker and Alex Moulis (Australia and New Zealand School of Government - ANZSOG)
Policy Advisory Networks: The Global Dimension?
Leslie Pal and Jennifer Spence (Hamad Bin Khalifa University)
The Narrative framing of cycle lanes implementation
Miguel Loyola, Jhon Nelson, David Levinson, Geoffrey Clifton
Assessing the Validity of the Documental Analysis of Transnational Networks as a Tool to Understand Policy Transfer Anna Malandrino (University of Bologna)
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Panel 6
Beyond Coercion, Emulation, Competition and Learning: The Frontiers of Causal Mechanisms in Research on Social Policy Diffusion S ESS I O N 6.1
date: 5 FEBRUARY 2021 time: 14:00 — 16:00 GMT moderator: Johanna Kuhlmann (University of Bremen) discussant: Amanda Shriwise (University of Bremen)
Causal mechanisms in the analysis of transnational social policy dynamics. Evidence from the Global South Johanna Kuhlmann and Tobias ten Brink (University of Bremen)
Influence of ILO Conventions on the Historical Development of Maternity Leave Policy in the World from 1884 until 2018 Keonhi Son (University of Bremen) Session 6.2 date: 12 FEBRUARY 2021 time: 14:00 — 16:00 GMT moderator: Amanda Shriwise (University of Bremen) discussant: Johanna Kuhlmann (University of Bremen)
British colonial development assistance: coercion, emulation, learning, or competition? Amanda Shriwise (University of Bremen)
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Political and social psychology in decision—making process: An analysis of Israeli politics
Karina Stange Calandrin (Universidade do Sagrado Coração — USC)
The ‘Double Translation’ of Social Protection Policy: From Agencies to Agents to Actors Stephen Devereux and Anna Wolkenhauer (Institute of Development Studies) Panel 7
Policy diffusion and policy transfers in East Asia: new unexplored patterns? S ESS I O N 7.1
date: 4 MARCH 2021 time: 09:00 — 11:00 GMT moderator: Giulia C. Romano (Centre d’études et de recherches
internationales — CERI) discussant: Kritika Sha (Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, National University of Singapore), Kim, Won Sub (Korea University), Daniel del Barrio Alvarez (The University Tokyo), Kidjie Saguin (Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, NUS).
What does the Policy Formulation Process of East Lantau Metropolis and Lantau Tomorrow Vision Policy Imply Hong Kong Policy Style
Poon Tsz Fung (Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, National University of Singapore)
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Transnational city-to-city policy transfer for the energy transition in Japan Daniel del Barrio Alvarez (The University Tokyo)
When Local Goes Transnational: Local Governments and Businesses in Policy Transfer Networks
Kritika Sha (Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, National University of Singapore) and Kidjie Saguin (Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, NUS)
Coercion or Learning? Policy Transfer of Social Policy in South Korea Won Sub Kim and Se—Hoon Jeon (Korea University) S ESS I O N 7.2
date: 11 MARCH 2021 time: 11:00 — 13:00 GMT
Kidjie Saguin (Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, NUS) discussant: Richa Shivakoti (Ryerson University), Armin Müller (Jacobs University) Yang Zhi (Nanjing University), Giulia C. Romano (Centre d’études et de recherches internationales — CERI) moderator:
Provider Payment Reform for Chinese Hospitals: Policy transfer and internal diffusion of international models Armin Müller (Jacobs University) and Tobias ten Brink
From Exporting Labour to Exporting Policies: The Philippines as a Source of Knowledge on Labor Migration Policies Richa Shivakoti (Ryerson University) and Kidjie Saguin (Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, NUS)
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Community governance with Chinese characteristics: an analysis of concept diffusion and translation Giulia C. Romano (Centre d’études et de recherches internationales — CERI)
Reconsidering the Policy Diffusion Pattern in China: A QCA Study on the Determinants, Combined Path and Formation Mechanism of Policy Outbreak Yang Zhi and Wei Shu (Nanjing University) Panel 8
Policy translation and translators S ESS I O N 8.1
date: 5 FEBRUARY 2021 time: 11:30 — 13:30 GMT
Patrick Hassenteufel (Universidade de Versalhes Paris—Saclay) discussant: Ulrike Zeigermann (University of Malsburg) moderator:
Politics of Translation of the Climate Adaptation Agenda in Brazil and Colombia
Carolina Milhorance, Fanny Howland, Eric Sabourin, Jean— François Le-Coq (Rede Clima — Climate Network)
A conceptual review of terminologies designating influential policy actors in global governance
Lara Gautier (Département de Gestion, Évaluation et Politique de Santé)
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The various lives of policy transfer. Iterations in the diffusion of Conditional Cash Transfers and Participatory Budgeting. Michelle Morais de Sá e Silva (The University of Oklahoma) and Osmany Porto de Oliveira (Federal University of São Paulo — Unifesp) S ESS I O N 8.2
date: 5 FEBRUARY 2021 time: 16:30 — 18:30 GMT moderator: Ulrike Zeigermann (University of Malsburg)
Patrick Hassenteufel (Universidade de Versalhes Paris—Saclay) discussant:
Influence of ILO Conventions on the Historical Development of Maternity Protection Policy in the World from 1884 until 2018 Keonhi Son (University of Bremen)
International secretariats as translators. The production of a “common language” on the state administration in the OECD—PUMA (Public management Directorate). Magdalena Hadjiisky (University of Strasbourg)
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Panel 9
Social Policy Diffusion date: 19 FEBRUARY 2021 time: 16:00 — 18:00 GMT moderator:
Michelle Morais de Sá e Silva (The University of
Oklahoma) Osmany Porto de Oliveira (Federal University of São Paulo — Unifesp) discussant:
Streams of international norms incorporation: Analysis of the diffusion of policies to end violence against women in Maria da Penha Law process Claudia Arai (Universidade de São Paulo)
Reconciling ideas? Universal Basic Income proposal as a boosting idea for cash transfers.
Leandro Teodoro Ferreira, Fernando José Gomes Freitas , Fábio Domingues Waltenberg and Roberta Mendes e Costa
Ideas and Policy Change. An analysis of the redesign of Portuguese social benefits during the Adjustment Period Maria Clara Oliveira
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Panel 12
Geopolitics of Urban Policy Transfer date: 16 MARCH 2021 time: 12:00 — 14:00 GMT
Camila Saraiva (Universidade Federal do ABC — UFABC) discussant: Gabriel Silvestre (University of Sheffield) and Guillermo Jajamovich (University of Buenos Aires) moderator:
Transfer, diffusion and circulation of public housing policies in Cape Verde: “Programa Casa para Todos — Habitar CV” Ana Mafalda Rodrigues (University of Cape Verde) and Giovanni Allegretti (Centro de Estudos Sociais)
Slum Upgrading geopolitics: urban policy-making and international relations in São Paulo Camila Saraiva (Universidade Federal do ABC — UFABC)
Smart Cities And Electromobility In Chile: Genealogy, Circulation And Implications For New Forms Of Urban Planning And Governance Constanza Ulriksen (Universidad de Chile)
Under urban resilience models: New or strengthened hegemonies hidden by sustainable discourses rules? Juliette Marin (Universidad de Chile)
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Panel 13
Triangular Cooperation and Policy Transfer S ESS I O N 13.1
date: 4 FEBRUARY 2021 time: 13:00 — 15:00 GMT
Juliana Costa (Federal University of São Paulo/ Articulação Sul) discussant: Melissa Pomeroy (Articulação Sul) moderator:
Brazilian Cooperation in Africa: Portuguese—Speaking African Countries and the Cooperation Projects Diffusion (1995—2014) David Beltrão Simons Tavares de Albuquerque
Brazil’s Development Cooperation with Africa: Is There any Solidarity Left? Hazal Melike Çoban
Overlapping agency in the security sector reform of Haiti? An analysis of key actors and processes
João Fernando Finazzi (Pontifícia Universidade Católica de Minas Gerais — PUC—MG) S ESS I O N 13.2
date: 25 FEBRUARY 2021 time: 13:00 — 15:00 GMT moderator: Melissa Pomeroy (Articulação Sul)
Juliana Costa (Federal University of São Paulo/ Articulação Sul) discussant:
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The Brazilian International Development Cooperation as a Foreign Policy Instrument: the Political Economy of Brazilian Technical Cooperation Laerte Apolinário Júnior
Panel 14
International Organizations and Development Cooperation S ESS I O N 14.1
date: 2 FEBRUARY 2021 time: 17:00 — 19:00 GMT moderator and discussant: Juliana Costa (Federal University of
São Paulo/Articulação Sul)
Digital platforms for South-South cooperation: WWP knowledge translation of Brazilian social policies Marianna Rios
Assynchronicity of the Climate Change Regime Douglas de Castro
Between Growth and Protection The Limits of Multilateral Development Banks in Hindering Carbon Emissions Vinicius Guilherme Rodrigues Vieira and Anastassia V. Obydenkova
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S ESS I O N 14.2
date: 9 FEBRUARY 2021 time: 17:00 — 19:00 GMT moderator and discussant: Juliana Costa (Federal University of
São Paulo/Articulação Sul)
Southern African Development Community (SADC): Regional Integration and Development Kelly Cristine Oliveira Meira (Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais — UFMG)
The United Nations and the mainstreaming of South— South Cooperation in policy transfer and development cooperation
Patrícia Nogueira Rinaldi (Faculdades de Campinas - FACAMP)
Regulatory Governance and Agencies Human Resources Policies: A Comparative Analysis
Shashwat Kumar and Jacint Jordana (Institut Barcelona Estudis Internacionals Barcelona).
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Panel 15
Brazil and Policy Diffusion date: 19 FEBRUARY 2021 time: 18:30 — 20:30 GMT
Osmany Porto de Oliveira (Federal University of São Paulo — Unifesp) discussant: Michelle Morais de Sá e Silva (The University of Oklahoma) moderator:
Affirmative action for Brazilian graduate education and the diffusion of models among schools Anna Carolina Venturini (IPP-CEBRAP)
Time for the Parliament? The diffusion of the Mandatory Budget for parliamentary amendments in the Brazilian states. Júlia Alves Marinho Rodrigues and Bárbara Maia Lima Madeira Pontes (Universidade de Brasília — UnB)
Countering International Terrorism Financing: the case of Brazil Mariana Bernussi
Cash Transfers in Brazil and in Chile: comparing ideas and the role of epistemic communities and instrument constituencies Maria Clara Oliveira (IDEFF) and Renata Bichir (USP/CEM).
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Panel 16
Latin America and Policy Diffusion S ESS I O N 14.1
date: 28 JANUARY 2021 time: 19:00 - 21:00 GMT moderator:
Cecilia Osorio Gonnet (Universidad Alberto
Hurtado) discussant: Raul Pacheco-Vega (Flacso-Mexico)
Determinants of Elite Support for Drug Legalization in Latin America
Asbel Bohigues and Xavier Fernández-i-Marín (Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais)
Global Health and Regional Integration: policy diffusion within the South American response to the Zika virus Emergency Flávia Thedim Costa Bueno
Taxing The Rich And The Powerful: A Comparative Exercise Based On Policies To Combat Tax Evasion In Three Latin American Countries Florencia Lorenzo
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Poster Session and Award date: 3 FEBRUARY 2021 time: 14:00 — 16:00 GMT
Raul Pacheco-Vega (Flacso—Mexico) and Giulia Romano (Centre d’études et de recherches internationales — CERI) evaluators:
Internationalization of Public Policies: an analysis of the transference of the Conditional Cash Transfer Program from Brazil to Peru (JUNTOS) Beatriz Terrim
Circulation of public policies in Colombia during the international sanitary emergency on Zika congenital syndrome Camila Correa da Costa
Public Policy Diffusion: An analysis of conditioned income transfer programs from Brazil and the Dominican Republic. Derick Ruas
Internalization of Public Policies: Analysis of the transfer of Nutritional Food Security from Brazil to Peru. Giovanna Vaz
Policy diffusion in the field of Nutritional Food Security: a study case on Brazil and Uruguay Júlia Bernardes R. Batista
Land Value Capture in Porto Alegre: public policy formulation in light of policy diffusion Marcela Ávila
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Food and Nutrition Security in Dominican Republic Mariana Caruso Capella
Concluding plenary Public Policy Transfer: Now, After and Beyond the Global Pandemic date: Monday 22 March 2020
Conference Concluding Remarks Osmany Porto De Oliveira — Unifesp Leslie Pal — Hamad Bin Khalifa University time: 16:30 — 17:00 GMT
Plenary Claire Dunlop (University of Exeter) Eugene Mccann (Simon Fraser University) time: 17:00 — 18:30 GMT
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Brazilian Style Celebration As we won’t be able to meet in person, have dinners and celebrate, we are sharing with you some tips for preparing Brazilian drinks at home, while listening for nice Brazilian music. Find our playlist will be available on Spotify and different recipes for caipirinhas below. Click to listen ->
Caipirinha Creative Recipes Caipirinha is the most popular and internationally known Brazilian drink. This drink is present in every type of celebration, it combines with the famous Brazilian barbecues, feijoada, happy hour and any get together. Originally made with cachaça, lemon, sugar and ice, nowadays there are no limits for creativity. It can be done with chachaça, sake or vodka, perfectly mixed with any fruit and spices. Now you can find out different recipes, choose your favorites and toast the conclusion of II ICPDDC with us.
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Tradicional: Lime and sugar ingredients
» » » »
Cachaça Lemon Sugar Ice
how to prepare
1. Cut the lemon in half and then into thin half—moon slices. 2. Crush lightly the lemon slices with the sugar in a low glass. Keep in mind that too much maceration makes the drink bitter. 3. Fill the glass with ice and add the cachaça. 4. Mix and finish with lemon slices. bartender tip: When
preparing caipirinha for many people, remember the rule of thirds, 1 part of the glass or jar of lemon slices, 1 part of ice and 1 part of cachaça. Don’t forget, the better the cachaça, the better the caipirinha.
Lemon caipirinha with coconut water and lemon popsicle ingredients
» » » » »
20 ml of vodka ¼ lemon 150 ml of coconut water 1 lemon popsicle Ice
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how to prepare
1. In a glass, squeeze the lemon with the help of a tamper. 2. Add coconut water and vodka. 3. Mix. 4. Dip the lemon popsicle and two ice cubes and serve immediately.
Watermelon Caipirinha ingredients
•
Watermelon diced and pitted enough to fill the glass
•
1 lemon cut into cubes (remove the white core that is bitter)
•
1 teaspoon of sugar (you can add more or less, depending on your taste)
•
1 shot of vodka or sake
•
Ice
how to prepare
1. Fill the glass with the watermelon and crush it with a caipirinhas punch until the juice is released. You will notice that the volume in the glass will decrease. 2. Add the lemon and sugar, and punch more, until the lemon releases the juice. 3. Place the vodka or sake and mix with a long spoon, pulling the liquid from the bottom of the glass to the top. 4. Fill the glass with ice and stir a little more, making movements from bottom to top 5. Drink it cold.
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Kiwi Caipirinha ingredients
» » » » »
2 kiwis 1 tablespoon of sugar 30 ml of cachaça or sake 40 ml of ice water Chopped ice
how to prepare
1. Beat 1 kiwi, sugar, ice water in a blender. 2. In the glass where the caipirinha will be served, punch the other kiwi, add the juice, then the cachaça or sake 3. Add the crushed ice and it is ready to drink
Strawberry Caipirinha with Passion Fruit ingredients
» » » » » »
2 tablespoons of sugar 2 doses of cachaça, vodka, flavoured vodka or sake 1 cup of washed chopped strawberries 2 natural passion fruit pulps 1/2 lemon juice Crushed ice
how to prepare
1. Knead the strawberries with the passion fruit pulp in a caipirinha pestle. 2. Add lemon juice, sugar and crushed ice. 3. Mix well and add the cachaça, vodka, flavoured vodka or sake. 4. Go for a cocktail shaker, cover and give a good shake. 5. Serve well chilled.
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Pineapple caipirinha with mint ingredients
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Pineapple 4 mint leaves 3 sugar spoons Crushed ice Cachaça, vodka, flavoured vodka or sake
how to prepare
1. Cut the pineapple into cubes and place in a large glass (at least 300 ml) until it fills 2/3 of its volume. 2. Add the mint and sugar. 3. With a tamper, crush the ingredients in the glass well. 4. Now fill the glass with crushed ice. If you have diced ice, just put it in a plastic bag and beat it with the tamper until it is crushed. 5. Finish filling the glass with cachaça, vodka, flavoured vodka or sake. This is where you control whether you want it stronger or weaker. 6. Pour the entire contents of your glass into a shaker, shake well and return to the glass. 7. It is now ready to drink.
Non—alcoholic Caipirinha Mocktails, alcohol—free drinks, are here to provide the same experience for those who prefer, do not want to, or cannot drink alcohol. It is recommended for all ages. To prepare this tasty option, it is necessary to keep in mind that it needs to have good combinations of flavors, remember this is not a juice or a vitamin. The perfect mix should have different types of ingredients.
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Choose your favorite ingredients — it can be teas, juices, fruits, vegetables, spices, reductions, gas, tonic water, and sparkling water, put it together and enjoy this refreshing drink with your beloved ones.
Virgin caipirinha ingredients
» » » » » »
2 strawberries 1 tablespoon of raspberries 1 tablespoon of blackberries 2 teaspoons of sugar Sparkling water Ice
how to prepare
1. Gently crush the fruit in a glass with sugar 2. Add ice 3. Mix the ingredients in a cocktail shaker 4. Finish the drink with sparkling water 5. Mix with a stirrer 6. Toast with friends and family
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Conference Mug
You can download the Logo of our Conference Mug and print it locally! Click here to have access to the logo art design.
Thank you.
INTERNATIONAL PUBLIC POLICIES LABORATORY