Research Thursdays - 鈥淣arrative Politics in Public Policy: Legalizing Cannabis鈥 by Hugh T. Miller

Hugh T. Miller

Hugh T. Miller


Hugh T. Miller, Ph.D., Professor of Public Administration, is the author of the newly published 鈥淣arrative Politics in Public Policy: Legalizing Cannabis.鈥澨

When reality is confusing, ambiguous, or uncertain, humans create narratives to impose order and to generate meaning and understanding. In conditions of democratic pluralism, these narratives may contradict one another. In the context of public policy discourse, policy narratives compete for dominance, enactment, and formal legitimacy. 鈥淣arrative Politics in Public Policy鈥 takes cannabis policy to be the exemplary discursive field in a U.S. policy environment where 50 different states have 50 different policy regimes, with most of them directly contradicting policies of the federal government.

This research addresses important dynamics such as how one comes to identify with and subscribe to a policy narrative; how narratives evolve and adapt over time; how enacted narratives negotiate with managerial narratives during implementation, and how fully institutionalized narratives remain true (or not) to the original founding policy narrative. Throughout the policy process and over time, cannabis policy narratives contest one another for legitimacy and advantage.听

鈥淭he turn to narratives is one of the most important theoretical developments in policy studies in recent times. Hugh Miller鈥檚 book further advances the approach in significant ways. Principally, he demonstrates the semiotic role symbolic connotations play in interpreting policy narratives. Employing cannabis policy as a case study, the work also more generally shows how narratives drive policy processes and the political struggles that shape them. This book is recommended for those interested in gaining a deeper theoretical understanding of policy politics, as well as the uses of interpretative policy analysis.鈥 听鈥听Prof. Frank Fischer, Humboldt Universit盲t, Berlin听

鈥淭he Narrative Politics model attributes agency to narratives, treating them as political contestants in a policy arena. Policy narratives compete for dominance, leading to enactment, leading to action and institutionalization.鈥
听鈥撎鼿ugh Miller, Professor of Public Administration

Miller adopted a narrative approach to studying public policy and administration with his 2012 book 鈥淕overning Narratives: Symbolic Politics and Policy Change (Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press) and also in a 2018 article published in Critical Policy Studies titled 鈥淣arrative Subscription in Public Policy Discourse.鈥 His other books include 鈥淧ostmodern Public Policy鈥 and, with the late Charles Fox, 鈥淧ostmodern Public Administration.鈥澨

Miller has been at 国产自拍 since 1996. He has served as director of the School of Public Administration and associate dean for the College of Design and Social Inquiry. He received his Ph.D. in Public Administration from American University.听

鈥淣arrative Politics in Public Policy鈥 is available at听

(Printable Version)