weekly engagement 3

Please respond in six to ten sentences. Use one policy issue for your entire response; you may draw from a DCo Forward 2029 focus area or another issue if you prefer.

  1. In one sentence, define a policy actor (in policy formation terms) and name two distinct actor types relevant to your issue.
  2. In one sentence, define power in the policy process and identify one concrete power resource or strategy (e.g., information, mobilization, access, funding, venue choice, narrative framing) that could matter for your issue.
  3. Define an advocacy coalition and identify one plausible coalition for your issue. Further, list the mission, purpose, and vision that unite coalition members.
  4. In one sentence, apply the ACF by stating one policy belief that likely anchors your coalition and one counter-belief held by an opposing coalition or key actor(s).
  5. In one sentence, name one likely venue and level of government where coalition conflict would play out (e.g., federal/state/local; NC legislature, agency, court/board).
  6. In one to two sentences, identify one administrative capacity or implementation constraint that could shape outcomes (e.g., staffing, expertise, authority, data, coordination, funding, legitimacy) and state one likely effect on policy performance.

Completion standard: responses must address all elements, stay within the sentence limit, and use terms in ways that are consistent with the assigned readings. – attached below

Attached Files (PDF/DOCX): Local Government in North-Carolina – Book.pdf, DCo20Forward20202920Strategic20Plan.pdf, Module 3 Lecture Discussion – Actors Power and Coalitions.pdf, Achieving Paid Family Leave in Oregon USA Analysis of the Policy Process Using the Advocacy Coalition Framework.pdf

Note: Content extraction from these files is restricted, please review them manually.

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