Contenu de l'article

Titre Narrators and Narratives: A Study of Climate and Air Issues in Delhi, India
Auteur Daniel Costie, Kristin Olofsson
Mir@bel Revue International Review of Public Policy
Numéro vol. 4, no 2, 2022
Résumé anglais Policy narratives are deliberative tools used to influence public opinion and shape the policy agenda. This work examines policy narratives and the policy actors who tell them by exploring the stories surrounding air and climate issues in Delhi, India, using the Narrative Policy Framework (NPF). As a proof-of-concept exercise that explores the potential validity and reliability of the ego-alter dyadic approach to dissecting narratives, we aim to enhance theory regarding narrativity by focusing on the narrator. We find distinct patterns of narrators in this set of narratives and several key trends are identified. There is an overall tendency towards hero-centric narratives and some distinct proliferation of specific groups as the receivers of actions. In addition, we find that there is a relationship between the magnitude of stories produced and a tendency to use traditional characterization in those narratives. This work has implications for future scholarship interested in empirical applications of discursive power in the policy process.
Source : Éditeur (via OpenEdition Journals)
Article en ligne http://journals.openedition.org/irpp/2698