How can governments persuade their citizens to act in socially beneficial ways? This ground-breaking book builds on the idea of ‘light touch interventions’ or ‘nudges’ proposed in Richard Thaler and Cass Sunstein’s highly influential Nudge (2008). While recognising the power of this approach, it argues that an alternative also needs to be considered: a ‘think’ strategy that calls on citizens to decide their own priorities as part of a process of civic and democratic renewal. As well as setting out these divergent approaches in theory, the book provides evidence from a number of experiments to show how using ‘nudge’ or ‘think’ techniques works in practice.
Updated and rewritten, this second edition features a new epilogue that reflects on recent developments in nudge theory and practice, introducing a radical version of nudge, ‘nudge plus’. There is also a substantial prologue by Cass Sunstein.
Tabla de materias
Foreword by Greg Clark, MP
Prologue by Cass Sunstein
Introduction
1 Nudging and thinking
2 Testing
3 Recycling
4 Volunteering
5 Voting
6 Petitioning
7 Giving
8 Donating
9 Debating
10 Including
11 Linking
12 Summary of key findings
13 Epilogue: the future of nudge and think
Index
Sobre el autor
Gerry Stoker is Professor of Politics and Governance at the University of Southampton