| Literature DB >> 31108863 |
Suk Joon Hwang1, Frances Berry2.
Abstract
Policy innovation and diffusion studies have, since 1990, generally focused on a specific policy over time. Yet, few studies have considered if and why states adopt related multiple policies-a package of reforms-in a policy area. Are more innovative states in DUI policy likely to adopt a comprehensive set of policies or use them as substitutes for each other? In this study, we assess how overall state innovativeness relates to the adoption of sixteen DUI (Driving Under the Influence) laws. We find that state innovativeness in traffic safety policies (but not overall policy innovativeness), organizational size, and professionalism of a state highway department increase the likelihood that a state will adopt a more comprehensive bundle of DUI laws. Furthermore, we also test whether institutional or competitive bandwagon effects are found across this policy area and demonstrate that national institutional bandwagon effects are an important factor related to the increased comprehensiveness of state adoption of DUI policies.Entities:
Keywords: DUI (Driving under Influence); bandwagon effect; comprehensiveness of state policy adoptions; state innovativeness
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31108863 PMCID: PMC6572683 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16101749
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
State DUI (Driving Under the Influence) laws included in analysis.
| State Laws | Data Source |
|---|---|
| False id law |
Alcohol policy information system (APIS) [ Statewide Availability Data System II: 1933–2003 (Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation, Prevention Research Center) [ Digest of State U.S. Alcohol-Highway Safety Related Legislation from 1990 to 2010 [ |
| Zero tolerance law | |
| 0.10 BAC (Blood Alcohol Concentration) law | |
| 0.08 BAC (Blood Alcohol Concentration) law | |
| High BAC (Blood Alcohol Concentration) law | |
| Mandatory use of an interlock device (first offender) | |
| Mandatory use of an interlock device (repeated offender) | |
| Alcohol exclusion law | |
| Administration revocation law | |
| Dram shop law | |
| Open container law | |
| Anti-consumption law | |
| Keg Registration | |
| Sobriety check point law | |
| Drug Per Se Law | |
| Drug Evaluation and Classification Program (DECP) |
Figure 1Traffic safety innovativeness, except drunk driving policy area, 1990–2010.
Figure 2General state innovativeness versus traffic safety innovativeness, except drunk driving policy area, 1990–2010.
Variable descriptions: State DUI policies.
| Theoretical Explanation | Variable | Description | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| State General Innovativeness | State General Innovativeness calculated by Boehmke and Skinner (2012) [ | |
| Traffic Safety Innovativeness (except DUI policy area) | State Traffic Safety Innovativeness calculated by author in the same way as Boehmke and Skinner (2012) [ | ||
| Organizational State Innovativeness | Size of a state highway-related agency jobs | The number of state government highway job-related employees per 10 miles of highway in a state | |
| Professionalism in a state highway-related agency | Average payroll of highway work-related employees (total payroll in highway work-related is divided by the total number of employees in highway jobs) | ||
| The Level of Resource Slack | Fiscal health (the ratio of total-state-revenue minus total-state’s spending to total spending) | ||
| Bandwagon Models | Institutional Bandwagon | Institutional dissimilarity (the gap between the national average of states’ adoptions and a state’s adoptions among DUI laws) | |
| Competitive Bandwagon | Below performance compared to other states with more DUI policies (the gap between the average of alcohol-related fatalities in a state and the average of alcohol-related fatalities in states with more DUI policies than the state) | ||
| Relevant Controls | Political Ideology | Citizen Ideology | Citizen and Government Ideology measurement (a higher score indicates a more liberal: 1–100 scale) |
| Government Ideology | |||
| Alcohol Consumption | Gallons of ethanol per capita in a state | ||
| Younger Population | Natural logarithm of younger population aged 15 to 24 in a state | ||
| Unemployment Rate | A percent is calculated by dividing the number of unemployed persons by the number of persons in the labor force | ||
Fixed effect estimation with Driscoll and Kraay standard errors.
| Independent Variables | Fixed Effect with Driscoll-Kraay |
|---|---|
| State General Innovativeness | −0.464 |
| (0.405) | |
| Traffic Safety Innovativeness (except DUI policy area) | 6.048 ** |
| (0.890) | |
| The size of a state highway-related agency jobs (Organizational Innovativeness) | 1.074 ** |
| (0.371) | |
| The Professionalism in a state highway-related agency (Organizational Innovativeness) | 1.144 ** |
| (0.109) | |
| The Level of Resource Slack of State government (Organizational Innovativeness: Fiscal Health) | −0.004 |
| (0.308) | |
| Institutional Bandwagon effect | 1.020 ** |
| (0.029) | |
| Competitive Bandwagon effect | −0.159 |
| (0.415) | |
| Political Liberalism (Citizen) | 0.000 |
| (0.002) | |
| Political Liberalism (Government) | −0.002 |
| (0.002) | |
| Alcohol Consumption | 2.068 ** |
| (0.365) | |
| Younger Population | −0.482 ** |
| (0.048) | |
| Unemployment Rate | 4.414 |
| (3.229) | |
| Constant | 13.619 ** |
| (1.370) | |
| Number of cases | 998 |
| Number of groups | 50 |
| R2 (within) | 0.8969 |
| F-test | 14,774.66 ** |
Note: * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01.
Comparison of hypothesis predictions and results.
| Hypothesis | Predicted Direction | Findings |
|---|---|---|
| H1-1: General policy innovativeness | Positive | No Effect |
| H1-2: Highway safety policy innovativeness | Positive | Positive (0.001) |
| H1-3: Size of government | Positive | Positive (0.001) |
| H1-4: Level of professionalism (capacity) | Positive | Positive (0.001) |
| H1-5: Government Fiscal Health (slack resources) | Positive | No Effect |
| H2-1: Institutional Bandwagon | Positive | Positive (0.001) |
| H2-2: Competitive Bandwagon | Negative | Negative but no effect |
Item Total Statistics for the Comprehensiveness Scale of DUI policies.
| Scale | Scale Mean If Item Deleted | Alpha |
|---|---|---|
| False id law | 8.693 | 0.6963 |
| Zero tolerance law | 8.831 | 0.6689 |
| 0.10 BAC law | 8.659 | 0.7056 |
| 0.08 BAC law | 9.047 | 0.6516 |
| High BAC law | 9.238 | 0.6606 |
| Mandatory use of an interlock device (first offender) | 9.593 | 0.6911 |
| Mandatory use of an interlock device (repeated offender) | 9.520 | 0.6763 |
| Alcohol exclusion law | 8.889 | 0.6879 |
| Administration revocation law | 8.836 | 0.6923 |
| Dram shop law | 8.773 | 0.7224 |
| Open container law | 8.943 | 0.6861 |
| Anti-consumption law | 8.815 | 0.7051 |
| Keg Registration | 9.253 | 0.6843 |
| Sobriety check point law | 8.913 | 0.7140 |
| Drug Per Se Law | 9.489 | 0.6859 |
| Drug Evaluation and Classification Program (DECP) | 8.843 | 0.6744 |
| Test Scale | 0.7022 |
Multi Collinearity Test for Independent Variables.
| Variables | VIF | 1/VIF |
|---|---|---|
| Traffic Safety Innovativeness (except DUI policy area) | 2.08 | 0.4816 |
| Political Liberalism (Government) | 1.81 | 0.5538 |
| Political Liberalism (Citizen) | 1.79 | 0.5597 |
| The Professionalism of State government (Organizational Innovativeness) | 1.74 | 0.5750 |
| Younger Population | 1.51 | 0.6623 |
| Unemployment Rate | 1.39 | 0.7201 |
| The Level of Resource Slack of State government (Organizational Innovativeness: Fiscal Health) | 1.34 | 0.7435 |
| State General Innovativeness | 1.25 | 0.8026 |
| Alcohol Consumption | 1.23 | 0.8135 |
| Competitive Bandwagon effect | 1.15 | 0.8719 |
| Institutional Bandwagon effect | 1.11 | 0.8988 |
| The Size of State government (Organizational Innovativeness) | 1.07 | 0.9311 |
| Mean VIF (Variance Inflation Factor) | 1.45 | |