Interest in policy instruments is not new. As Hood (2007: 128), reminds us:
Debating alternative possible ways of keeping public order, enforcing laws, or collecting revenue is a classical concern of political thought. In the Enlightenment era, discussion of effective instruments of policy was a central concern of European ‘police science’ from the early policy science literature of the 1530s.
In fact, social scientists studying the state and government have long taken an interest in the issue of the technologies of government, including its instruments Weber and Foucault, for instance.
Interest in policy instruments is not new. As Hood (2007: 128), reminds us:
Debating alternative possible ways of keeping public order, enforcing laws, or collecting revenue is a classical concern of political thought. In the Enlightenment era, discussion of effective instruments of policy was a central concern of European ‘police science’ from the early policy science literature of the 1530s.
In fact, social scientists studying the state and government have long taken an interest in the issue of the technologies of government, including its instruments Weber and Foucault, for instance.
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