The Journal of Politics

Research Notes

Innovation and Reinvention in State Policymaking: Theory and the Evolution of Living Will Laws

Henry R. Glicka1 and Scott P. Haysa2

a1 Florida State University

a2 Southern Illinois University

Abstract

Most research on the diffusion of policy innovations focuses on the date of adoption and its correlates. This research examines an aspect of innovation which has received little attention: policy reinvention during the initial diffusion process and through amendment. The central proposition is that even though a set of laws or policies may be grouped into one broad, general category, states create substantively different policies through reinvention, which has important consequences for groups affected by the legislation. Hypotheses concerning the relationship between date of adoption and policy content and the effect of particular controversial policy provisions on reinventions are examined. The study has general implications for the study of the diffusion of innovations and policy in state politics.

(Accepted September 19 1989)

(Received November 16 1990)

Henry R. Glick is a professor of political science and research associate, Institute on Aging, the Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL 32306-2049.

Scott P. Hays is an assistant professor of political science, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, IL 62901.