Spillover Effects and Cooperative Federalism in the Promotion of Early Childhood Policies in the State of Ceará
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5216/lahrs.v6.86337Keywords:
Cooperative federalism, Spillover effects, Early childhood policiesAbstract
This article examines the extent to which human rights public policies formulated at higher levels of government produce inductive effects on municipalities in the State of Ceará, with a specific focus on the institutionalization of early childhood policies. The study is based on the hypothesis that the expansion of this agenda occurs through processes of selective institutional diffusion, driven by mechanisms of federal spillover and conditioned by socioeconomic inequalities and uneven state capacities. Methodologically, the research adopts a quantitative-descriptive approach based on an analysis of Ceará’s 184 municipalities, using legislative, institutional, and socioeconomic data from official sources. The findings reveal a high degree of formal institutional capillarity, particularly in relation to municipal councils and planning instruments, with special emphasis on early childhood plans. However, the low incidence of specialized administrative bodies indicates a selective and asymmetric pattern of institutionalization. The article concludes that intergovernmental induction mechanisms foster institutional diffusion but are not sufficient, by themselves, to ensure the material effectiveness of public policies, whose consolidation ultimately depends on strengthening local state capacities.
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