Title: FRAMING DRUG POLICY: whats the problem represented to be
1FRAMING DRUG POLICYwhats the problem
represented to be?
- Carol Bacchi
- Politics Discipline
- University of Adelaide
2Whats the problem represented to be?An
approach to policy
- Introduce the approach
- Offer a list of questions outlining a Whats the
problem (represented to be)? approach. - Identity some areas where the approach could be
usefully applied in the field of alcohol and drug
policy.
3Comparing a Whats the Problem? approach to
Conventional Approaches to policy
Meredith Edwards (2004) Public policy addresses
societal problems and is about what governments
do, why they do it and what difference it
makes. a reactive approach based on the
assumption that governments react to fixed and
identifiable social problems and do their best to
resolve them.
4A Whats the problem (represented to be)?
approach draws attention to the ways in which
governments (and others) give a particular shape
to social problems these shapes are called
problem representations problem representations
have effects
5How are we to identify problem representations?
- Distinction between cause and concern
- Examine specific policy proposals (provides
pointers to how the issue is being
conceptualized) - Scrutinize policy debates
6Whats the Problem (represented to be)? Questions
to ask
- 1. What is the problem (of problem gambling,
problem gamblers, drug use, domestic
violence, pay equity, child care, etc.)
represented to be either in a specific policy
debate or in a specific policy proposal? - 2. What presuppositions or assumptions underlie
the representation/s? Identify binaries and
contradictions. - 3. What effects are produced by this
representation of the problem?
7Questions to ask (continued)
- What is left unproblematic in this
representation? Where are the silences? - How would responses differ if the problem
were thought about or represented differently?
Here it is useful to think about shifts in
representation of the problem over time or
across cultures.
8Effects of problem representations
- How subjects are constituted within a problem
representation - Limits of what can be said
- Limits on what will change and what will stay the
same - Benefits for some harm to others
9Applying a whats the problem represented to
be? approach
- Dominant representations of drug problems
- The harm minimization response
- Drug use as a health issue
- Broader social policy frameworks social
exclusion, whole of government, partnerships - Broader social and cultural context eg
consumptogenic culture
10Implications for those with a reform agenda
- Conduct a whats the problem represented to be?
analysis of problem representations (including
those that lodge in ones own proposals) - Try to shape reforms that avoid effects we
consider deleterious - Consider context