HIGHLIGHTS
- who: Behavioural Public Policy et al. from the Department of Administration and Sociology, Erasmus University Rotterdam, Rotterdam have published the paper: Public managers ’ trust in citizens and their preferences for behavioral policy instruments: evidence from a mixed-methods study, in the Journal: (JOURNAL) of 24/02/2021
- what: The authors examine how public managers' preferences for behavioral policy instruments compare to their preferences for classic policy instruments like sticks, carrots and sermons. The authors examine local-level public managers' preferences for behavioral policy instruments, and the effects of trust in citizens on these preferences, using . . .
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