Policy Exceptionalism: analysis of ideational framework governing agricultural sector in Lithuania

Authors

  • Jonė Vitkauskaitė-Ramanauskienė Stockholm University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5755/j01.ppaa.19.3.26320

Keywords:

Lithuanian agricultural policy, agriculture-environment nexus, policy exceptionalism, discourse analysis.

Abstract

After WWII, the agricultural sector emerged as an area of exception in western democracies and is often characterised by sector-specific policies, compartmentalised institutions, well-organised interests’ groups and ideas explaining why this sector cannot be governed by free-market forces. Nevertheless, over the last three decades, the sector has been reformed to incorporate neoliberal and environmental demands to a certain extent. Hence, the current agricultural regime consists of two competing discourses - policy exceptionalism versus post-exceptionalism. Study analyses this ideational struggle in the context of Lithuania. The study conducts interpretative discourse analysis of a site of discursive contestation, namely parliamentary debates over policy changes, which sparked farmers’ unrest in Autumn, 2019. It is argued that policy exceptionalism is a dominant discourse governing Lithuanian agricultural sector and that it serves as a discursive barrier to the incorporation of environmental concerns into the agricultural policy-making process. 



Author Biography

Jonė Vitkauskaitė-Ramanauskienė, Stockholm University

Jonė Vitkauskaitė-Ramanauskienė – Graduate of M.A. in Environmental social science at Stockholm University. Consultant at ‘Center for environmental policy’.

E-mail: jonevitkauskaite@gmail.com

 Jonė Vitkauskaitė-Ramanauskienė – Stokholmo universiteto Aplinkos ir socialinių mokslų magistrė, bei Aplinkos teisės centro konsultantė.

El. paštas: jonevitkauskaite@gmail.com

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Published

2020-10-15

Issue

Section

Articles