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We're delighted to announce that all articles accepted for publication in Behavioural Public Policy from 15th May 2023 will be 'open access'; published with a Creative Commons licence and freely available to read online (see the journal's Open Access Options page for available licence options). The costs of open access publication will be covered through agreements between the publisher and the author's institution, payment of APCs by funding bodies, or else waived entirely, ensuring every author can publish and enjoy the benefits of OA. 

Please see the journal's Open Access Options page for instructions on how to request an APC waiver. See this FAQ for more information.

 
    • You have access: full
    • Open access
  • ISSN: 2398-063X (Print), 2398-0648 (Online)
  • Editors: Adam Oliver London School of Economics and Political Science, UK, George A. Akerlof Georgetown University, USA, and Cass R. Sunstein Harvard Law School, USA
  • Editorial board
Behavioural Public Policy is an interdisciplinary and international peer-reviewed, gold open access journal devoted to behavioural research and its relevance to public policy. The study of human behaviour is important within many disciplinary specialties and in recent years the findings from this field have begun to be applied to policy concerns in a substantive and sustained way. BPP seeks to be multidisciplinary and therefore welcomes articles from economists, psychologists, philosophers, anthropologists, sociologists, political scientists, primatologists, evolutionary biologists, legal scholars and others, so long as their work relates the study of human behaviour directly to a policy concern.BPP focuses on high-quality research which has international relevance and which is framed such that the arguments are accessible to a multidisciplinary audience of academics and policy makers.

BPP Blog

  • A Nudge+ for Peruvian Pension Drawdown
  • 30 September 2024, Tony Hockley (LSE)
  • Policies allowing pension withdrawals at any age in Peru could leave people short of essential savings, Constanza Valdez suggests a "Nudge+ intervention to...

 

 

 

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