Adrienne Davidson, PhD

Professor & Scholar of Political Science

RESEARCH OVERVIEW

As a scholar of public policy, I am interested in identifying why and when governments make policy change, and studying the impacts that policy change has on citizens.

The relationship between citizens and government is bidirectional. Citizens can shape the policy decisions of governments—they can push governments to act through voting behaviour, through shifts in public opinion, or through direct political action. Government decisions shape citizens’ experiences of the state. Yet, the material and interpretive effects of policy are not evenly distributed. The way public policy distributes resources or influences the relationships between different groups within a population feeds back into the experiences and opinions of citizens, and structures the opportunities for citizens to influence policy.

I explore these questions within several ongoing research projects, under the following three broader categories:

Lessons from Crisis

Why do governments respond differently to global crises, like the COVID-19 pandemic? What sources of evidence do policymakers use to make and justify decisions, and how do they communicate with the public about evidence and risk? How does the public judge the information and decisions as legitimate, or not?

Policy Feedback in Child Care and Public Schooling

How do the decisions governments make contribute to policy feedback effects, including distributive inequalities related access to high quality early learning environments? How do parents make decisions about child care and schooling, and how has COVID-19 constrained their decision-making?

Settler and State Politics of Indigenous Reconciliation

How have hybrid policy paradigms emerged in relation to the US and Canadian governments’ adoption of modern land claims policy? What are the institutional and political reverberations? What are the dynamics of settler identity and policy preferences in Canada? How does the settler political majority influence policy outcomes?

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