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After decades of attempts, Israel has enacted a national health insurance law and begun to substantially change its health care system. I explore the conditions that enabled final passage of the law in light of theories of nonincremental change in pluralist policy systems. I also discuss the implications of this policy breakthrough for links between policy subsystems, leadership, and the establishment of a new policy equilibrium.
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L. D. Brown Exceptionalism as the Rule? U.S. Health Policy Innovation and Cross-National Learning Journal of Health Politics Policy and Law, January 1, 1998; 23(1): 35 - 51. [Abstract] [PDF] |
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