Publication | Open Access
Narrative strategies in a nondemocratic setting: Moscow’s urban policy debates
34
Citations
58
References
2021
Year
Narrative Policy FrameworkNarrative And IdentityPolitical BehaviorSocial SciencesNarrative RepresentationJournalismNarrative Studies (Narrative Psychology)Political CommunicationUrban PoliticsAngel ShiftsGeopoliticsUrban TheoryPublic PolicyUrban PlanningPolicy StudiesUrban GeographyNarrative Studies (Comparative Literature)Policy PerspectiveArtsPolitical ScienceNarrative StrategiesUrban Life
Abstract The Narrative Policy Framework (NPF) explains the role of narratives in policy processes. The NPF was developed for democratic contexts and has not been systematically applied in a nondemocratic setting. This study fills this gap with an empirical analysis of narrative strategies used by governmental and oppositional actors in urban policy debates in Moscow. Results show how governmental actors consistently use angel shifts, contain issues, and avoid using causal mechanisms, while actors opposing governmental policy use devil shifts, expand issues, and use intentional causal mechanisms. The findings suggest that narrative strategies differ depending on whether policy actors seek to promote policy reforms or draw attention to problems. We argue that policy actors’ objectives are a well‐suited predictor for narrative strategies in both democratic and nondemocratic contexts.
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