Abstract

Policy entrepreneurs are individuals who attempt to influence the policy process and its outcomes through their opportunistic or incremental actions. Their success in the policy-making process has been associated with the convergence of four factors: behavioural traits; institutional factors; network position and political capital. Policy entrepreneurs have received little study in low- and middle-income country policy research despite observations of individualized decision-making, informal institutions and the unequal distribution and exercise of power in policymaking. This article aims to identify whether policy entrepreneurs were present in the policy process around integrated community case management (iCCM) in Burkina Faso, whether they were successful in achieving policy change, and whether success or failure can be explained using existing policy entrepreneur frameworks from high-income polities. This mixed methods policy study collected data from in-depth qualitative interviews and social network surveys of actors involved in iCCM policymaking [known locally as C-integrated management of childhood illness (IMCI)]; data were analysed based on the framework categories. Interview data pointed to one key individual who played a significant role in the inclusion of pneumonia treatment into the country’s iCCM policy, an issue that had been a point of contention between government policy elites and development partners. Social network data confirmed that this actor was strategically located in the policy network to be able to reach the most other actors and to be able to control the flow of information. Although some development partner actors were as strategically located, none had the same level of authority or trust as was imbued by being a member of the government civil service. The entrepreneur’s mid-level rank in the health ministry may have encouraged him/her to invest political capital and take risks that would not have been feasible or attractive to a more senior actor. This study highlights the convergence of factors needed to be an entrepreneur, as well as the role of development partner actors in creating a facilitating environment.

Highlights

  • Introduction and backgroundIn studying why policies change, researchers have highlighted the role of policy entrepreneurs

  • This article aims to identify whether policy entrepreneurs were present in the policy process around integrated community case management in Burkina Faso, whether they were successful in achieving policy change, and whether success or failure can be explained using existing policy entrepreneur frameworks from high-income polities

  • This study found that a successful policy entrepreneur in the Ministry of Health was willing to invest political capital, could leverage his/her institutional affiliation and occupied a strategic network position

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Summary

Introduction

Introduction and backgroundIn studying why policies change, researchers have highlighted the role of policy entrepreneurs. ‘Policy entrepreneurs’ are individuals in the policy process who advocate for a specific policy proposal, build coalitions or secure political action and are willing to invest their own resources as well as their social and political capital in hopes of a future payoff (Kingdon 2003; Mintrom and Norman 2009). Policy entrepreneurs gained their name because of their high degree of entrepreneurial flair during policymaking, including a propensity for leadership, persuasion, persistence and innovation (Kingdon 2003; Mintrom and Norman 2009). The application of policy entrepreneurship concepts, incorporating network analysis, could be instrumental in identifying sources of power and their consequences on health policymaking in this context

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