Grievance politics and technocracy in a developmental state
This article uses a process-tracing approach to understand changes inSingapore’s health sector from the start of self-rule in 1959 to the end of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2022. Singapore is a developmental state recognized for its effective management of healthcare costs and its lack of political fre...
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2024
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sg-smu-ink.soss_research-53822025-01-16T09:18:02Z Grievance politics and technocracy in a developmental state NAQVI, Ijlal ROSSI, Federico M. TAN, Rayner Kay Jin This article uses a process-tracing approach to understand changes inSingapore’s health sector from the start of self-rule in 1959 to the end of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2022. Singapore is a developmental state recognized for its effective management of healthcare costs and its lack of political freedom. In both respects, the ‘Singapore model’ is of interest to other cities and nations. The standard narrative is one of technocratic proficiency in a context in which civic freedoms are heavily constrained, but this article identifies the surprisingly important role of social voices at key moments. It finds episodes in which effective changes to social policies are not the product of a state embedded in an organized society, but rather are influenced by the independent organizational capacity of certain social groups providing inputs to state elites on social grievances and policy needs. Effective policy changes require a responsive state elite that — even if it is technocratically dominated, as is the case in Singapore — can listen to social claims and provide answers that are not repressive. The article conceptualizes these dynamics as ‘grievance politics’ and shows their role in explaining health reforms. It contributes to understanding global health systems and policymaking in developmental states by a fruitful cross-fertilization with social movement studies 2024-04-18T07:00:00Z text https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/4123 info:doi/10.1111/dech.12821 Research Collection School of Social Sciences eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Social voices Policy feedback Healthcare policy Health reforms Health Policy Public Affairs, Public Policy and Public Administration |
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Social voices Policy feedback Healthcare policy Health reforms Health Policy Public Affairs, Public Policy and Public Administration NAQVI, Ijlal ROSSI, Federico M. TAN, Rayner Kay Jin Grievance politics and technocracy in a developmental state |
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This article uses a process-tracing approach to understand changes inSingapore’s health sector from the start of self-rule in 1959 to the end of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2022. Singapore is a developmental state recognized for its effective management of healthcare costs and its lack of political freedom. In both respects, the ‘Singapore model’ is of interest to other cities and nations. The standard narrative is one of technocratic proficiency in a context in which civic freedoms are heavily constrained, but this article identifies the surprisingly important role of social voices at key moments. It finds episodes in which effective changes to social policies are not the product of a state embedded in an organized society, but rather are influenced by the independent organizational capacity of certain social groups providing inputs to state elites on social grievances and policy needs. Effective policy changes require a responsive state elite that — even if it is technocratically dominated, as is the case in Singapore — can listen to social claims and provide answers that are not repressive. The article conceptualizes these dynamics as ‘grievance politics’ and shows their role in explaining health reforms. It contributes to understanding global health systems and policymaking in developmental states by a fruitful cross-fertilization with social movement studies |
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text |
author |
NAQVI, Ijlal ROSSI, Federico M. TAN, Rayner Kay Jin |
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NAQVI, Ijlal ROSSI, Federico M. TAN, Rayner Kay Jin |
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NAQVI, Ijlal |
title |
Grievance politics and technocracy in a developmental state |
title_short |
Grievance politics and technocracy in a developmental state |
title_full |
Grievance politics and technocracy in a developmental state |
title_fullStr |
Grievance politics and technocracy in a developmental state |
title_full_unstemmed |
Grievance politics and technocracy in a developmental state |
title_sort |
grievance politics and technocracy in a developmental state |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2024 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/4123 |
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