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Public Policy and the Idea of the Vietnamese State: The Cultural Political Economy of Domestic Water Supply

Reis, Nadine; Mollinga, Peter

Authors

Nadine Reis



Abstract

Using Rural Water Supply (RWS) policy practices as a case study, this article shows that the disjunction between implementation as formally conceived and informally practised is not a question of ineffective policy cycle dynamics, but rather an inherent feature of Vietnam’s Cultural Political Economy. Drawing on critical realist approaches to social and state theory, we argue that formal and informal RWS policy practices, as a set of two interconnected spheres, serve as key, separate but connected, mechanisms for reproducing the distribution of material resources (primarily through the informal sphere) and the hegemony of ideas (primarily through the formal sphere) in Vietnamese society. We conclude that the formal, administrative practices of RWS policy are primarily to be understood in their function of reproducing the idea of the state and state legitimacy. RWS administrative practices function to sustain the core social and political order in Vietnam as institutionalised in “the state”, rather than being primarily oriented to improving rural water supply. The findings raise questions for donor-supported programs that focus on formal administrative institutions and practices for improving the performance of the water sector.

Citation

Reis, N., & Mollinga, P. Public Policy and the Idea of the Vietnamese State: The Cultural Political Economy of Domestic Water Supply. Asian Studies Review, 39(4), 628-648. https://doi.org/10.1080/10357823.2015.1082975

Journal Article Type Article
Online Publication Date Sep 28, 2015
Deposit Date Aug 16, 2015
Journal Asian Studies Review
Print ISSN 1035-7823
Electronic ISSN 1467-8403
Publisher Taylor and Francis Group
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 39
Issue 4
Pages 628-648
DOI https://doi.org/10.1080/10357823.2015.1082975
Keywords Vietnam, Cultural Political Economy, public policy, policy practices, water supply, state theory, critical realism