The comparative 'court politics' of covid-19: explaining government responses to the pandemic
The comparative 'court politics' of covid-19: explaining government responses to the pandemic
What has shaped the different responses to COVID-19? The orthodoxy in the crisis management literature holds that the response to events like COVID-19 is primarily shaped by a decentralized group of actors on the ground. In this paper, we argue that a top-down explanation, focused on the actions and intentions of the core executive, is an essential complement to this bottom-up emphasis on a distributed network. Specifically, we advance a 'court politics’ understanding of how governing elites have taken advice and made decisions, and sketch out the impact this has had in framing and constraining crisis response efforts. The argument uses an interpretive framework centred on the dilemmas that governing elites face in managing crisis. We illustrate the underlying 'court politics' which has driven responses to COVID-19 in England and Denmark. We show that pathologies and dysfunctions in Johnson’s court have filtered through into inertia and indecisiveness, while the centralization of authority in Frederiksen’s court has enabled swift and decisive intervention. Our analysis shows that a top-down emphasis on executive government – and the ‘court politics’ therein – offers a fruitful agenda for understanding and comparing COVID-19 crisis response.
COVID-19, Denmark, UK, core executive, court politics, interpretivism
1258-1277
Corbett, Jack
ad651655-ac70-4072-a36f-92165e296ce2
Boswell, John
34bad0df-3d4d-40ce-948f-65871e3d783c
Salomonsen, Heidi Houlberg
777f6453-9d77-4b14-b14e-9707854fd551
30 June 2021
Corbett, Jack
ad651655-ac70-4072-a36f-92165e296ce2
Boswell, John
34bad0df-3d4d-40ce-948f-65871e3d783c
Salomonsen, Heidi Houlberg
777f6453-9d77-4b14-b14e-9707854fd551
Corbett, Jack, Boswell, John and Salomonsen, Heidi Houlberg
(2021)
The comparative 'court politics' of covid-19: explaining government responses to the pandemic.
Journal of European Public Policy, 28 (8), .
(doi:10.1080/13501763.2021.1942159).
Abstract
What has shaped the different responses to COVID-19? The orthodoxy in the crisis management literature holds that the response to events like COVID-19 is primarily shaped by a decentralized group of actors on the ground. In this paper, we argue that a top-down explanation, focused on the actions and intentions of the core executive, is an essential complement to this bottom-up emphasis on a distributed network. Specifically, we advance a 'court politics’ understanding of how governing elites have taken advice and made decisions, and sketch out the impact this has had in framing and constraining crisis response efforts. The argument uses an interpretive framework centred on the dilemmas that governing elites face in managing crisis. We illustrate the underlying 'court politics' which has driven responses to COVID-19 in England and Denmark. We show that pathologies and dysfunctions in Johnson’s court have filtered through into inertia and indecisiveness, while the centralization of authority in Frederiksen’s court has enabled swift and decisive intervention. Our analysis shows that a top-down emphasis on executive government – and the ‘court politics’ therein – offers a fruitful agenda for understanding and comparing COVID-19 crisis response.
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Boswell et al Covid Courts Accepted
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Accepted/In Press date: 18 May 2021
Published date: 30 June 2021
Additional Information:
Funding Information:
We would like to thank Paul Cairney, Richard Gleave and J?rgen Gr?nneg?rd Christensen for invaluable comments on earlier drafts. We also thank the Special Issue editors and anonymous reviewers for their helpful feedback.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
Copyright:
Copyright 2021 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
Keywords:
COVID-19, Denmark, UK, core executive, court politics, interpretivism
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 449790
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/449790
ISSN: 1350-1763
PURE UUID: 29b14679-56fb-48dd-b110-a64513e2e1d7
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Date deposited: 17 Jun 2021 16:31
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 06:38
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Heidi Houlberg Salomonsen
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