[IMCnetwork] Seminar: Actor-Policy Interactions in Implementation of Indonesia’s Higher Education Reform, May 1
Nick Cheesman
nick.cheesman at anu.edu.au
Thu Apr 11 10:53:20 AEST 2024
Dear IMC listserv
Please see below the announcement of a forthcoming seminar by Hali Aprimadya on research in Interpretive Policy Analysis that should be of interest to some of you.
Best wishes
Nick
Title
Navigating Ideational Dynamics: Actor-Policy Interactions in Implementation of Indonesia’s Higher Education Reform
Abstract
This thesis explores the diversity of actors' ideas, beliefs, and traditions in influencing and shaping their implementation of public policies. Drawing on the experience of higher education reform in Indonesia between 1999 and 2019, this thesis illuminates the intricate nature of actor-policy interactions by asking: how do actors' held beliefs and traditions shape their responses to 'new' ideas propagated by policies? And what do these interpretations and actions mean to policy implementation? This thesis uses an interpretive approach to explore academics' interpretations of a series of regulatory changes intended to shape their actions.
This study demonstrates that the implementation of research-related policies in Indonesian higher education is a political endeavour shaped by the interactions between actors' held beliefs and practices and policies' ideas and objectives. Facilitated by their 'situated' agency, Indonesian academics' interpretations and actions in response to research policies often constitute expressive acts that display a degree of discord with policy intents. This thesis contends that these incongruities depict improvisations driven by academics' motivations to overcome institutional conflicts rather than mere acts of negligence. Through decentered analysis, the thesis illuminates how policy implementation is an art and craft shaped by the dynamics of actor-policy ideational interactions while providing methodological insights on the significance of combining actors' intra-discursive and extra-discursive contexts in interpretive policy research. Finally, this thesis contributes to understanding the governance complexities of Indonesian higher education as one of the region's most dynamic higher education sectors.
Biography
Hali Aprimadya is a PhD candidate at the Crawford School of Public Policy and an analyst at Indonesia’s National Research and Innovation Agency (BRIN). He holds a Bachelor of Human Sciences (Communication) from International Islamic University Malaysia and a Master of Public Policy in Policy Analysis from Crawford School of Public Policy, ANU. Drawing upon over a decade of experience within Indonesia’s public sector, Hali brings a wealth of practical insight to his doctoral research project. Before commencing his PhD, Hali was responsible for overseeing research collaboration initiatives with international partners, such as USAID, The Dutch Research Council (NWO), and UK Research and Innovation (UKRI). As an aspiring scholar, Hali’s research interests are primarily on topics related to policy implementation, higher education and research governance, and interpretive research methods.
Supervisors
Professor Helen Sullivan, ANU (Panel chair and primary supervisor)
Professor Sharon Bessell, ANU
Associate Professor Peter Woelert, Melbourne Graduate School of Education, University of Melbourne.
Meeting details
Wednesday, 1 May 2024, 12:30 – 13.30
In-person: Seminar Room 8, Crawford School of Public Policy
Zoom Meeting
https://anu.zoom.us/j/87553230548?pwd=eTRkc0xSVmZiMmVvQXhKaTBMdTFTdz09
Meeting ID: 875 5323 0548
Password: 453707
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