It is about time! Exploring the clashing timeframes of politics and public policy experiments

Main Article Content

Ringa Raudla
Külli Sarapuu
Johanna Vallistu
Nastassia Harbuzova

Abstract

Although existing studies on experimental policymaking have acknowledged the importance of the political setting in which policy experiments


take place, we lack systematic knowledge on how various political dimensions affect experimental policymaking. In this article, we address


a specific gap in the existing understanding of the politics of experimentation: how political timeframes influence experimental policymaking.


Drawing on theoretical discussions on experimental policymaking, public policy, electoral politics, and mediatization of politics, we outline ex-


pectations about how electoral and problem cycles may influence the timing, design, and learning from policy experiments. We argue electoral


timeframes are likely to discourage politicians from undertaking large-scale policy experiments and if politicians decide to launch experiments,


they prefer shorter designs. The electoral cycle may lead politicians to draw too hasty conclusions or ignore the experiment’s results altogether.


We expect problem cycles to shorten politicians’ time horizons further as there is pressure to solve problems quickly. We probe the plausibility


of our theoretical expectations using interview data from two different country contexts: Estonia and Finland.

Article Details

How to Cite
Raudla, R., Sarapuu, K., Vallistu, J., & Harbuzova, N. (2024). It is about time! Exploring the clashing timeframes of politics and public policy experiments. Annual Review of Policy Design, 12(1). Retrieved from https://ojs.unbc.ca/index.php/design/article/view/1975
Section
Research Symposium