<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><!DOCTYPE Zthes SYSTEM "http://zthes.z3950.org/schema/zthes-1.0.dtd">  <Zthes><term><termId>351</termId><termName>Policy Cycle</termName><termType>TT</termType><termLanguage>en-EN</termLanguage><termVocabulary>D4RUNOFF</termVocabulary>	<termStatus>active</termStatus>	<termApproval>approved</termApproval>	<termSortkey>Policy Cycle</termSortkey><termNote label="Scope"><![CDATA[ <p>The policy cycle framework originates from the idea of organizing and ordering the complexity of policymaking. It is a heuristic tool through which different stages of the ongoing and never-ending dynamics of policy processes can be segmented and then analyzed.</p>
<p>The policy cycle – also called the “stages approaches to policy process” (De Leon, 1999) – does not have any explanatory relevance and is thus not at the theoretical core of public policy (where there is a richness of different theoretical frameworks). However, it is a powerful conceptual tool to simplify and make “workable” the complexity of policymaking.</p>
<p>Overall, it holds a relevant descriptive capacity that is still useful, despite many critics having underlined that it risks oversimplifying the interconnected and intertwined density of the policy process flux.</p>
<p>The cycle is usually divided into five stages:</p>
<ul>
<li>agenda setting,</li>
<li>formulation,</li>
<li>decision-making,</li>
<li>implementation, and</li>
<li>evaluation.</li>
</ul> ]]></termNote><termNote label="Source"><![CDATA[ <p>Capano, G., Pritoni, A. (2020). Policy Cycle. In: Harris, P., Bitonti, A., Fleisher, C., Skorkjær Binderkrantz, A. (eds) The Palgrave Encyclopedia of Interest Groups, Lobbying and Public Affairs . Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-13895-0_69-1</p> ]]></termNote><termCreatedDate>Policy Cycle</termCreatedDate></term>  </Zthes>