"Leading political scientists [argue that] national politicians, far from being gridlocked, have acted with alacrity to implement fundamental and often surprising reforms in fields as diverse as education, immigration, and tax reform. In some of these areas the powerful lobbyists have been, literally, banished from the Congressional committee rooms, confounding most text books on American politics. This is an important book, which teaches the value of ideas in the post-utilitarian world of modern America. Political Studies

In The New Politics of Public Policy, Marc Landy and Martin Levin bring together a group of leading experts to challenge the view of the Bush-Reagan era as one characterised by policy gridlock. They demonstrate that there were a surprising number of impressive policy outcomes and that many were not in the least "conservative." The number and scope of these innovations, they argue, refute the conventional wisdom that the policy process in those years was biased against change, dominated by obstructionary interests, and characterised by incrementalism. The authors examine the most important arenas of modem domestic policy reform - health, entitlements, environment, and taxation as well as the changes that have taken place in the key policy-making institutions of Congress, the executive branch, the states, and the courts. They provide in-depth investigations of the 1986 and 1990 immigration Reforrn Acts, the 1986 Tax Reform Act, Aid to Children with Special Needs, the Superfund, and the Clean Air Act. They show how changes in Congressional structure affect the representation of interests, deliberation, and the resolution of conflict and how these effects, in turn, influence the passage of legislation. They explain how the replacement of on-budget funding by mandates requiring others to pay has made it easier to enact expensive laws and regulations. Most importantly, they demonstrate that a new politics of public policy has emerged - one characterised by a competition for novel ideas, a lowering of the legitimacy barrier regarding governmental intervention, and a broader understanding of rights.
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This text discusses topics in modern domestic policy reform, such as health, entitlements, environment and taxation, as well as changes that have occurred in the policy-making institutions of Congress, the executive branch, the states and the courts.
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Part I. Introduction
Chapter 1. Of Interests and Values: The New Politics and the New Political Science
Part II. Adversarial Legalism and the Rights Revolution
Chapter 2. Separation of Powers and the Strategy of Rights: The Expansion of Special Education
Chapter 3. The Politics of Rapid Legal Change: Immigration Policy in the 1980s
Chapter 4. Adversarial Legalism and American Government
Part III. Taxing and Spending
Chapter 5. Policy Models and Political Change: Insights from the Passage of Tax Reform
Chapter 6. The Politics of the Entitlement Process
Chapter 7. Elusive Community: Democracy, Deliberation, and the Reconstruction of Health Policy
Part IV. Regulation and Deregulation
Chapter 8. The New Politics of Environmental Policy
Chapter 9. Policy making in the Contemporary Congress: Three Dimensions of Performance
Part V. Conclusion
Chapter 10. New Politics, New Elites, Old Publics
Chapter 11. Two-Tier Politics and the Problem of Public Policy
Chapter 12. The new Politics of Public Policy
Notes
List of Contirbutors
Index

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All people want to talk about these days is the Republican 'revolution' in the process and substance of public policy. This collection of essays gives us a framework for assessing the novelty of the 'revolution' and, more importantly, for grounding today's policy developments in the changes in American politics and political philosophy over the past two decades.
—Richard A. Brody, Stanford University
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All people want to talk about these days is the Republican 'revolution' in the process and substance of public policy. This collection of essays gives us a framework for assessing the novelty of the 'revolution' and, more importantly, for grounding today's policy developments in the changes in American politics and political philosophy over the past two decades. -- Richard A. Brody, Stanford University An ambitious, provocative book that develops a powerful argument explaining how and why policy innovation is more characteristic of the American system than gridlock."-Thomas E. Mann, The Brookings Institution."In this book many of the most distinguished analysts of American public policies and processes offer fresh, challenging, and often illuminating commentaries. -- Austin Ranney, University of California, Berkeley
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780801848780
Publisert
1995-06-26
Utgiver
Vendor
Johns Hopkins University Press
Vekt
482 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, UP, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
360

Biographical note

Marc K. Landy is professor of political science at Boston College and a senior fellow of the Gordon Public Policy Center at Brandeis University.