Public Policy: Continuity and ChangeThis new text provides students with a broad survey of public policy theory and history, detailed in plain language. It focuses on distributive, redistributive, competitive regulatory, protective regulatory, and morality policies. It incorporates pluralists, elitists, state-centered, agenda-setting, problem definition, and social movement approaches into a model of policy regimes useful in explaining long-term policy stability and short bursts of policy change. The text covers ten substantive policy areas: social welfare, health care, civil rights, environmental protection, labor, competitive regulatory, fertility control, criminal justice, education, and economics, and provides extensive discussions about recent policy changes and contemporary policy debates. |
Contents
Using Policy Theory to Explain Policy Change | 4 |
PART II | 6 |
Why Government and Public Policies | 11 |
Copyright | |
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abortion action administration agencies Amendment American areas argued assistance Association benefits bill century Chapter cities civil rights committee companies competitive Congress conservative Constitution continued contributed corporate costs created crime Deal decision declined Department dominant drug early economic emerged environmental established example expansion explain families federal groups House increased individual industrial initiatives Institute interest interest groups involved issues justice labor late leaders liberal major morality movement Office operate organizations paradigm party passed percent period policy change policy regime political pollution poor poverty president prison problem produced programs Progressive prohibited promote protection public policies rates regulations regulatory response role rules schools Security Senate shift social Supreme Court term theory tion types unemployment unions United vote wages welfare women workers York