» Articles » PMID: 35942244

Policy Capacity During COVID-19 in Asia: A Systematic Literature Review

Overview
Journal J Public Aff
Publisher Wiley
Date 2022 Aug 9
PMID 35942244
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

COVID-19 has revealed the policy capacity of some governance institutions, both resilience and vulnerability. Hence, this circumstance has demanded public administration scholars and practitioners to rethink the existing governance practices, particularly in making effective crisis-related policies. This paper reviewed primary and secondary studies exploring the application of policy capacity competencies in facilitating COVID-19 handling in Asia. In achieving so, we did a systematic literature review of relevant studies published between January and October 2020. Applying the agreed search term to several databases, we found 2541 studies, while merely 30 were included for review. Findings from the studies are predominantly closely linked to operational capacity ( 21). Other studies are related to political and analytical capacity ( 14 and 7, retrospectively). We found that there are some dilemmas and inadequacy of understanding concerning the role of features in certain capacities (such as technology use versus individual privacy, the paradox of trust and legitimacy, or centralisation versus decentralisation), particularly in the time of crisis, which is a calling for future research.

Citing Articles

Policy capacity during COVID-19 in Asia: A systematic literature review.

Mardiyanta A, Wijaya C J Public Aff. 2022; :e2835.

PMID: 35942244 PMC: 9349412. DOI: 10.1002/pa.2835.

References
1.
Chen Y, Yen Y, Yu S, Su E . An Examination on the Transmission of COVID-19 and the Effect of Response Strategies: A Comparative Analysis. Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2020; 17(16). PMC: 7459733. DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17165687. View

2.
Earnshaw V, Eaton L, Kalichman S, Brousseau N, Hill E, Fox A . COVID-19 conspiracy beliefs, health behaviors, and policy support. Transl Behav Med. 2020; 10(4):850-856. PMC: 7499784. DOI: 10.1093/tbm/ibaa090. View

3.
Vallejo Jr B, Ong R . Policy responses and government science advice for the COVID 19 pandemic in the Philippines: January to April 2020. Prog Disaster Sci. 2021; 7:100115. PMC: 7299863. DOI: 10.1016/j.pdisas.2020.100115. View

4.
Almutairi A, BaniMustafa A, Alessa Y, Almutairi S, Almaleh Y . Public Trust and Compliance with the Precautionary Measures Against COVID-19 Employed by Authorities in Saudi Arabia. Risk Manag Healthc Policy. 2020; 13:753-760. PMC: 7354916. DOI: 10.2147/RMHP.S257287. View

5.
Lu Q, Liu T, Li C, Chen J, Zhu Y, You S . Investigation into Information Release of Chinese Government and Departments on COVID-19. Data Inf Manag. 2022; 4(3):209-235. PMC: 8969570. DOI: 10.2478/dim-2020-0014. View