Mavrot, CĂ©lineHadorn, Susanne2025-01-0620231749-41920952-0767https://doi.org/10.1177/0952076721996516https://irf.fhnw.ch/handle/11654/48307The non-implementation of political decisions is a major challenge of contemporary political life. Policy analysis has devoted careful attention to implementation gaps resulting from administrative non-compliance with political orders. However, the fact that political authorities actually want to enforce all policies should not be taken for granted. This article proposes a conceptual model that systematically accounts for cross-agency divergence and convergence processes both at the political and at the street levels. We find that in inter-sectoral policies, dissent between different heads of agencies (political level) or between groups of implementing bureaucrats (street level) rather than dissent between the political and the street-level can be a major cause of non-compliance. Based on a comparative dataset on the implementation of the smoking ban in 12 Swiss states, the article analyzes cross-agency fragmentation processes. It advocates a stronger dialogue between street-level bureaucracy and policy coordination literatures, and nuances the conceptualization of (non-)compliance in a cross-agency context.en330 - Wirtschaft320 - PolitikWhen politicians do not care for the policy: Street-level compliance in cross-agency contexts01A - Beitrag in wissenschaftlicher Zeitschrift267-286