
Depoliticisation, Resilience and the Herceptin Post‐code Lottery Crisis: Holding Back the Tide
Author(s) -
Wood Matthew
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
the british journal of politics & international relations
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.049
H-Index - 41
eISSN - 1467-856X
pISSN - 1369-1481
DOI - 10.1111/1467-856x.12060
Subject(s) - resilience (materials science) , lottery , political science , code (set theory) , political economy , criminology , economics , sociology , computer security , computer science , microeconomics , physics , set (abstract data type) , programming language , thermodynamics
Research Highlights and Abstract This article: Covers new empirical terrain in the study of depoliticisation, with an in‐depth case study of health technology regulation; Analyses depoliticisation from a novel analytical perspective, examining how depoliticised institutions are resilient to external pressure for politicisation; Posits a distinctive framework for analysing resilience, drawing on cognate literatures on policy networks and agencification; Raises interesting and distinctive questions about the nature of depoliticisation in advanced liberal democracies, arguing it is more contested than commonly acknowledged. Depoliticisation as a concept offers distinctive insights into how governments attempt to relieve political pressures in liberal democracies. Analysis has examined the effects of depoliticisation tactics on the public, but not how those tactics are sustained during moments of political tension. Drawing on policy networks and agencification literatures, this article examines how these tactics are resilient against pressure for politicisation. Using an in‐depth case study of the controversial appraisal of cancer drug H erceptin in 2005/6 by the N ational I nstitute for H ealth and C linical E xcellence ( NICE ), the article examines how ‘resilient’ NICE was to external politicisation. It is argued that NICE was resilient because it was effectively ‘insulated’ by formal procedures and informal norms of deference to scientific expertise. This mechanism is termed ‘institutional double glazing’. The conclusion suggests developments to the conceptual and methodological framework of depoliticisation, and highlights theoretical insights into the nature of ‘anti‐politics’ in contemporary democracies.