000 00962nam a22001337a 4500
999 _c531952
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008 251112b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aMills, Stuart
_957850
245 _aBeing good and doing good in behavioral policymaking
260 _aPublic Administration Review
300 _a82(5), Sep-Oct, 2025: p.1332-1346
520 _aLibertarian paternalism (LP) draws on behavioral economics to advocate for noncoercive, nonfiscal policy interventions to improve individual well-being. However, growing criticism is encouraging behavioral policymaking—long dominated by LP approaches—to consider more structural and fiscally impactful interventions as valid responses to behavioral findings. Keynesian social philosophy allows behavioral policymaking to incorporate these new perspectives alongside existing LP approaches.- Reproduced https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/puar.13908
773 _aPublic Administration Review
942 _cAR