𝔖 Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

πŸ“

Studying Public Policy 4th Edition

✍ Scribed by Michael Howlett


Tongue
English
Leaves
401
Edition
4
Category
Library

⬇  Acquire This Volume

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Table of Contents


Cover
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
Acknowledgements
I: Methodology, Theory, and Context in Public Policy Research
1: Studying Public Policy: Why and How
Public Policy Defined
Methodological Considerations for Studying Public Policy
The Policy Cycle Framework: A Problem-Solving Model of the Policy Process
The Need for Public Policy Capacity
Identifying and Studying Policy Styles and Policy Regimes
Overview of the Book
Study Questions
Further Readings
2: Understanding Public Policy: Theoretical Approaches
Evolution of the Policy Sciences
Approaches to Public Policy Analysis: Positivism and Post-Positivism Revisited
Positivist Approaches to Policy Analysis
Post-Positivist Approaches to Policy Analysis
Reconciling the Positivist and Post-Positivist Approaches
Approaches to Public Policy Studies: Multi-Level, Multi-Disciplinary
Public Choice
Class Analysis
Pluralism
Corporatism
Neo-Institutionalism
Statism
Conclusion
Study Questions
Further Readings
3: The Policy Context: States and Societies
Institutions, Ideas, and Actors in Public Policy
The Role of Policy Ideas: Paradigms, Public Sentiments, Symbolic Frames, and Program Ideas
The Political-Economic Context
Capitalism
Liberalism
Democracy
Policy-Making in the Liberal-Democratic Capitalist State
Political-Economic Structures and Public Policy-Making
Political Systems and Public Policy
Domestic Policy Actors
The International System and Public Policy
Policy Subsystems and Policy Regimes: Integrating Institutions, Ideas, and Actors
Policy Subsystems
Conclusion
Study Questions
Further Readings
II: The Policy Cycle
4: Agenda-Setting: Definition and Problematics
What Is Agenda-Setting?
Issue Initiation
Issue Expansion
Agenda-Entrance
The Problematics of Agenda-Setting: Issue-Attention Dynamics
Issue-Attention in Governments and Society
Problems versus Conditions
Problem Tractability
Other Dilemmas of Policy Problems
The Substance of Agenda-Setting: Problem Construction
Objective Construction: Convergence Theory and Political Business Cycles
Subjective Construction: Ideas and Discourses
Gauging Problem Severity: Indicators and Measures
Actors and Tasks in Agenda-Setting
Epistemic Communities
Instrument Constituencies
Advocacy Coalitions
Policy Entrepreneurs and Policy Brokers
Theories of Agenda-Setting: Ideas, Actors, and Structures
Funnels of Causality
Modes of Agenda-Setting
The Multiple Streams Model and Its Evolution
Conclusion: A Policy Subsystem Conception of Agenda-Setting
Study Questions
Further Readings
5: Policy Formulation: Identifying and Assessing Policy Alternatives
What Is Policy Formulation?
The Problematics of Policy Formulation
Procedural and Substantive Capacity Limits
Context in Policy Formulation: Design and Non-Design Orientations
The Substance of Policy Formulation: Selecting Policy Tools
Nodality, or Information-Based Policy Tools
Authority-Based Policy Tools
Treasure-Based Policy Tools
Organization-Based Policy Tools
The Formulation Challenge: Mixing and Bundling Policy Tools
Actors in Policy Formulation
Policy Advisors and Policy Advisory Systems
Instrument Constituencies
Modelling Policy Formulation
Conclusion: Policy Formulation – Opening up the Black Box
Study Questions
Further Readings
6: Decision-Making in Public Policy: Policy Selection and Choice
What Is Decision-Making in the Public Sector? 176
Problematics of Decision-Making: An Unknown Future and Risks of Failure
Over- and Under-Reactions
Uncertainty, Ambiguity, Ignorance, and Incompetence
The Substance of Decision-Making: Seeking Advice and Evidence about Policy Choices
Policy Analysis
Evidence-Based Decision-Making
The Nature of Policy Choices: Negative, Positive, and Non-Decisions
Actors in the Decision-Making Process
Executive, Legislators, Judges, and Administrative Officials
Policy Networks
Theories of Decision-Making
Early Rational and Incremental Models
The Comprehensive and Bounded-Rationality Models
Incremental Model
Mixed-Scanning Models
Garbage Can Models
β€œDecision Accretion” Model
Conclusion: Revisiting Public Policy Decision-Making Modes
Study Questions
Further Readings
7: Policy Implementation: Putting Policies into Effect
What Is Policy Implementation?
Barriers to Policy Implementation
Environment and Context
Policy Subjects’ Behaviour
Policy Uncertainties
Implementation Capacity
Actors and Activities in Policy Implementation
Multiple Streams and Actors in Implementation
The Problem Stream
The Policy Stream
The Politics Stream
The Process Stream
The Program Stream
Implementation Theories
First Generation: Borrowing from Public Administration
Second Generation: Borrowing from Organization Theory
Third Generation: Rationalist Theories and Game Theories
Fourth Generation Implementation Theory: Taking Capacity Seriously
Conclusion: Implementation Styles and Long-Term Instrument Preferences
Study Questions
Further Readings
8: Policy Evaluation: Policy-Making as Learning
What Is Policy Evaluation?
Definition
History
Perspectives on Evaluation: Positivist and Post-Positivist
Approaches to Evaluation: Administrative and Political
Policy Evaluation as Policy Learning
Actors in the Policy Evaluation Process
Internal Evaluators
External Evaluators
Types of Policy Evaluation
Process Evaluation
Impact Evaluation
Policy Success and Failure
Assessing the Results of Policy Evaluation
Evaluation Criteria
Dealing with the Results of Evaluation: Policy Feedback and Policy Termination
Linking Policy Evaluation and Learning: Evaluation Styles in Government
Conclusion: The Role of Evaluation in Policy Cycle
Study Questions
Further Readings
III: Long-Term Policy Dynamics
9: Patterns of Policy Change: Between Punctuations and Increments
The Outcomes of Policy Succession
Policy Feedback
Policy Termination
Types of Policy Change
Normal Policy Change
Atypical Policy Change
Punctuated Equilibrium: Linking Normal and Atypical Policy Change
The Continued Contemporary Relevance of Studying Public Policy: Can the Policy Cycle Model Cope with Challenges from "Truthiness"?
Conclusion
Study Questions
Further Readings
Notes
References
Index


πŸ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


The Public Policy Process (4th Edition)
✍ Michael Hill πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 2005 πŸ› Longman 🌐 English

The Public Policy Process is essential reading for anyone trying to understand the process by which public policy is made. It provides a stimulating and accessible read that clarifies the complexities and diversities of a difficult subject. A fundamental revision of Michael Hill's earlier book The

Public Speaking Handbook (4th Edition)
✍ Steven A. Beebe, Susan J. Beebe πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 2012 πŸ› Pearson 🌐 English

Updated in its 4th edition, Beebe, Public Speaking Handbook provides a unique, audience-centered approach in a reader-friendly reference format. Adapted from the authors’ top-selling public speaking book, the handbook format makes it a quick and easy way access to key information. Its distinctive an

The Policing Web (Studies in Crime and P
✍ Jean-Paul Brodeur πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 2010 πŸ› Oxford University Press, USA 🌐 English

Nearly all research devoted to policing focuses on public uniformed police and their legal use of force. An overwhelming amount of this work draws on evidence from Anglo-American police forces. These twin emphases have led to a limited view. Agencies such as criminal investigation units, intelligen

Modern Labor Economics: Theory and Publi
✍ Ronald G Ehrenberg, Robert S. Smith πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 2011 πŸ› Prentice Hall 🌐 English

A clear, comprehensive introduction to labor market behavior. Β  In addition to presenting core theory, Ehrenberg/Smith summarizes empirical evidence for or against each hypothesis, and illustrates the usefulness of theory for public policy analysis. Β  The authors continue to make this text a c