ABSTRACT

Traditionally, images have played an important role in politics and policy making, mostly in relation to propaganda and public communication. However, contemporary society is inundated with visual material due to the increasing ubiquity of media and visual technologies that facilitate the production, distribution and consumption of images in new and innovative ways. As such, a visual culture has emerged, and a number of authors have written on visual culture and the technologies which underlie it. However, a clear link to policy making is still lacking.

This books links the emergence of this visual culture to policy making and explores how visual culture (and the growing number of technologies used to create and distribute images) influence the course, content and outcome of public policy making. It examines how visual culture and policy making in contemporary society are intertwined, elaborating concepts such as power, framing and storytelling. It then links this to technology, and the way this can enhance power, transparency, registration, surveillance and communication.

Dealing with the entire cycle of public policy making, from agenda-setting, to policy design, decision making to evaluation, the book contains diverse international case studies including water management, risk management, live-stock diseases, minority integration, racism, freedom of speech, healthcare, disaster evaluation and terrorism.

chapter 1|21 pages

Introduction

Living in a world of images

chapter 2|28 pages

Visual events and visual technologies

A brief historical overview

chapter 3|19 pages

The power to visualize

chapter 4|28 pages

Visual events and the policy process

chapter 5|16 pages

Research strategy

chapter 6|29 pages

Agenda setting

Setting the wheels in motion

chapter 7|23 pages

Policy design and decision making

Unravelling complexity

chapter 8|24 pages

Policy evaluation

Who is to blame?

chapter 9|22 pages

Visual culture and the policy process

Towards a conclusion

chapter 10|14 pages

Reflection

Towards a visual polity