Skip to product information
1 of 1
Regular price £21.39 GBP
Regular price £23.99 GBP Sale price £21.39 GBP
Sale Sold out
Free UK Shipping

Freshly Printed - allow 8 days lead

The Origins of Behavioural Public Policy

An accessible introduction to how behavioural economics is used to influence and inform developments in public policy.

Adam Oliver (Author)

9781316649664, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 24 April 2017

210 pages
22.8 x 15.1 x 1.3 cm, 0.32 kg

'Adam Oliver's The Origins of Behavioural Public Policy is an impressive and rigorous introduction to an increasingly influential approach to policy design. The book is ideally suited to informed readers who wish to gain a more scholarly understanding of BPP, beyond the level of popular science. It will prove especially valuable to both undergraduate and graduate students aiming to gain knowledge of the central theoretical and empirical building blocks of BPP. It will also be of benefit to policymakers who are interested in a concise but detailed overview of the emergence of the approach, as well as an insightful resource on the potential future development of BPP as a productive form of policy intervention.' Ross James Gildea, Journal of Politics and Life Sciences

The use of behavioural science to inform policy is one of the main developments in the social sciences over the last several decades. In this book, Adam Oliver offers an accessible introduction to the development of behavioural public policy, examining how behavioural economics might be used to inform the design of a broad spectrum of policy frameworks, from nudges, to bans on certain individual behaviours, to the regulation of the commercial sector. He also considers how behavioural economics can explain and predict phenomena as a challenge to economists' assumptions around how people perceive time, utility and money. The book offers an intellectual foundation for all those concerned with behavioural public policy, from academics, undergraduate and postgraduate students with a diverse range of disciplinary perspectives, such as economics, political science, sociology and anthropology, to policy makers and practitioners working directly with behavioural public policy in their everyday working lives.

Preface
1. Assuming rationality
2. Challenging rationality
3. Describing risky behaviours
4. About time
5. Experiencing and remembering
6. Motivational crowding
7. Nudges
8. Shoves and budges
9. Give and take
10. Summing up
Note on references
Bibliography.

Subject Areas: Behavioural economics [KCK], Economic theory & philosophy [KCA], Economics [KC], Political science & theory [JPA], Psychology [JM]

View full details