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A case study of the Global Food Security Act of 2016 : interorganizational policymaking and food security d/discourses
Author(s) -
Megan Annette Koch Schraedley
Publication year - 2018
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Dissertations/theses
DOI - 10.32469/10355/69876
Subject(s) - food security , public relations , government (linguistics) , meaning (existential) , political science , ambiguity , public administration , qualitative research , business , agriculture , sociology , social science , geography , psychology , linguistics , philosophy , archaeology , psychotherapist
For this dissertation case study, I examined how individuals, especially those who worked on interorganizational food security programming and policymaking, discussed organizational policy messaging and the discursively constructed meanings around their work related to food security. I focused on the communicative linkages between a US government development organization and the problem of food insecurity because this condition continues to plague nearly a billion people around the world. Specifically, I investigated the communicative processes leading up to the passage of the Global Food Security Act (2016), including the organizational construction of meaning that helped get the bipartisan legislation passed at a contentious time in our government's history. I conducted in-depth, qualitative interviews with food security professionals and coded documents related to the passage of the GFSA. This study serves a dual purpose: 1) The findings provide evidence of language convergence/meaning divergence that adds to a deeper scholarly understanding of how policies are created and interpreted differently, and 2) the findings offer insight into the ways in which a US government organization uses strategic ambiguity to persuade stakeholders to fund food security programming and support impactful international programming.

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