Discovery Early Career Researcher Award - Grant ID: DE230100387
Funder
Australian Research Council
Funding Amount
$403,553.00
Summary
The Politics of Tobacco Policy in Indonesia. This project aims to investigate the difficulty of regulating tobacco products in Indonesia by interrogating the influence of domestic politics, the global tobacco industry and the role of interest-based lobbying. To probe the political context that has fostered this situation, it combines multiple streams theory and a policy networks approach. Expected outcomes include a detailed political history of tobacco-related policy, mapping of stakeholder inf ....The Politics of Tobacco Policy in Indonesia. This project aims to investigate the difficulty of regulating tobacco products in Indonesia by interrogating the influence of domestic politics, the global tobacco industry and the role of interest-based lobbying. To probe the political context that has fostered this situation, it combines multiple streams theory and a policy networks approach. Expected outcomes include a detailed political history of tobacco-related policy, mapping of stakeholder influence on policy, and a conceptual model explaining connections between policy creation and stakeholder networks. Project benefits include a tested analytical approach that can be used to explore policy environments for the regulation of harmful, but licit, industries, in a range of contexts.Read moreRead less
Political Conflict, Inefficient Markets, and Food Crises. This project aims to investigate the effect of political conflict on food markets in low- and middle-income countries across Africa and Southeast Asia by utilizing granular data on ethnopolitical conflict, prices, and institutions. This project expects to generate new knowledge in the area of conflict studies using an innovative approach that allows eliciting disruptive effects of conflict by examining price relationships in spatially and ....Political Conflict, Inefficient Markets, and Food Crises. This project aims to investigate the effect of political conflict on food markets in low- and middle-income countries across Africa and Southeast Asia by utilizing granular data on ethnopolitical conflict, prices, and institutions. This project expects to generate new knowledge in the area of conflict studies using an innovative approach that allows eliciting disruptive effects of conflict by examining price relationships in spatially and temporally connected food and agricultural markets. Expected outcomes of this project include improved techniques to examine market inefficiencies in the wake of political conflict. This should provide significant benefits, such as creating an early warning platform for food crises in times of conflict.Read moreRead less