Description
Book SynopsisThe novel theoretical framework offered in this book presents a radical reconception of the place of knowledge in contemporary policy making in Europe.
Trade Review"A very thought-provoking book for anyone involved in policymaking, and in trying to understand how and why policy is, or is not, made and implemented in different contexts." SRA Research Matters.
Table of ContentsIntroduction: knowledge in policy - embodied, inscribed, enacted ~ Richard Freeman and Steve Sturdy; Part One: Policy knowledge in space and time; Seeing knowledge in mental health in Scotland ~ Jennifer Smith-Merry; Knowledge moves: regulation and the evaluation of Portuguese schools ~ Natércio Afonso and Estela Costa; Knowledge, policy and coordinated action: mental health in Europe ~ Richard Freeman and Steve Sturdy; Part Two: Embodied, inscribed and enacted knowledges; 'We know who to talk to': embodied knowledge in England's Department of Health ~ Jo Maybin; Reconstructing school inspectorates in Europe: the role of inscribed knowledge ~ Sotiria Grek; Enacting knowledge in a European project ~ Maria José dos Santos Freitas; Part Three: Knowledge interests, knowledge conflict and knowledge work; Knowledge interests: promoting and resisting change in mental health in Hungary ~ Bori Fernezelyi and Gábor Eröss; Knowledge conflicts: embodiment, inscription and the education of children with learning disabilities in Germany ~ Alma Demszky; Knowledge work: organising mental health care networks in Belgium ~ Sophie Thunus, Gaëtan Cerfontaine and Frédéric Schoenaers; Knowledge and policy in research and practice ~ Richard Freeman and Steve Sturdy.