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9780887386978

Speaking Truth to Power: Art and Craft of Policy Analysis

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780887386978

  • ISBN10:

    0887386970

  • Edition: Reprint
  • Format: Nonspecific Binding
  • Copyright: 1987-01-30
  • Publisher: Routledge

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Summary

One of the foremost experts in public policy here attempts not only to describe what public policy is, but given societal changes in the last two decades, to account for its present status. To learn from the past in order to establish public policy as a discipline in its own right, Wildavsky traces its motifs from their beginnings in the 1960s to the 1980s. Starting from the premise that there has been growing polarization of political elites, he shows how public policy as a field has had to face increased politicization. For Wildavsky, the field of public policy needs to incorporate more awareness of the human aspects of policy making: he emphasizes the political choices to be made in a competitive environment and the social relations that sustain them. When the first specialist schools devoted solely to public policy came into existence in the 1960s, the programs of the Great Society were their main impetus. With the disillusionment and failure of the Great Society, the identity of public policy became transformed. New theoretical issues had to be addressed. In this volume, Wildavsky provides a foundation for the theory no less than the practice of policy-making. Aaron Wildavsky is professor of political science, University of California, Berkeley. He founded the School of Public Policy there, and is presently its Director. He was formerly Director of the Russell Sage Foundation. He was the President if the American Political Science Association for the years 1986-1987.

Table of Contents

Preface To The Transaction Edition xv
Introduction To The Transaction Edition: The Once and Future School of Public Policy xxiii
Introduction
Analysis as Art
1(2)
Problems of Implementation
3(9)
Morality in Policy Analysis
12(3)
The Art of Policy Analysis
15(4)
Notes
19(2)
PART 1 Resources versus Objectives 21(88)
Policy Analysis Is What Information Systems Are Not
26(15)
Modern Management Information Systems
27(8)
Theory
35(1)
Organization
36(2)
History
38(1)
Notes
39(2)
Strategic Retreat on Objectives: Learning from Failure in American Public Policy
41(21)
Retreat on Objectives
43(5)
The Search for Attainable Objectives
48(5)
Retreat or Rout?
53(3)
Redefining the Problem
56(4)
Notes
60(2)
Policy as Its Own Cause
62(24)
The Law of Large Solutions in Public Policy
63(4)
Internalizing External Effects
67(4)
The Corporate State?
71(2)
Government as a Federation of Sectors
73(4)
The World Outside
77(2)
Change for Its Own Sake
79(1)
Sectors of Policy as Prohibiters and Proponents of Change
80(2)
Problems and Solutions
82(2)
Notes
84(2)
Coordination without a Coordinator
86(23)
The Revolution We Are Waiting for Is Already Here
87(3)
Rules Containing the Consensus
90(1)
Rules for Resolving Uncertainty about Values
91(4)
Program Characteristics as Determinants of Cost
95(6)
Misunderstandings that Always Cost More
101(2)
Alternative Hypotheses
103(4)
Notes
107(2)
PART 2 Social Interaction versus Intellectual Cogitation 109(96)
Between Planning and Politics: Intellect vs. Interaction as Analysis
114(28)
Exchange
117(1)
Motivation
118(2)
Planning and Politics
120(4)
Analysis
124(3)
Rationality
127(1)
Politics and Planning Are Equally (Ir)rational
128(1)
The Imperatives
129(6)
``Retrospection''
135(4)
Reprise
139(1)
Notes
140(2)
A Bias Toward Federalism
142(13)
The Cooperative-Coercive Model
143(4)
The Conflict-Consent Model
147(3)
Size vs. Number or Interaction vs. Cogitation Revisited
150(3)
Notes
153(2)
Opportunity Costs and Merit Wants
155(29)
Two Doctrines
156(1)
Cost Versus Merit, or Interaction and Cogitation in a New Guise
156(3)
Cost in Economics
159(2)
History
161(2)
Texts in the Private Sector
163(1)
Four Concepts of Worth
164(3)
Opportunity Cost and Markets
167(5)
Cost in the Public Sector
172(2)
Economics in the Public Sector: Public Goods and Merit Wants
174(7)
Notes
181(3)
Economy and Environment/Rationality and Ritual
184(21)
The Delaware River Basin Project's Failure
184(7)
Alternatives for Controlling Water Pollution
191(2)
The Risky Environment
193(6)
Economics for Environmentalists
199(3)
Notes
202(3)
PART 3 Dogma versus Skepticism 205(76)
Notes
211(1)
The Self-Evaluating Organization
212(26)
Evaluation
213(1)
Obstacles to Evaluation
214(6)
The Policy-Administration Dichotomy Revisited
220(4)
Who Will Pay the Costs of Change?
224(2)
Evaluation, Incorporated
226(3)
Adjusting to the Environment
229(2)
Joining Knowledge with Power
231(3)
Evaluation as Trust
234(3)
Notes
237(1)
Skepticism and Dogma in the White House: Jimmy Carter's Theory of Governing
238(14)
Uniformity
240(1)
Predictability
240(1)
Cogitation
241(1)
Comprehensiveness
242(1)
Incompatibility
243(2)
Top-Light and Bottom-Heavy
245(1)
Belief
246(1)
``He-the-People''
247(2)
Notes
249(3)
Citizens as Analysts
252(29)
Citizenship as Moral Development
253(3)
Mr. and Mrs. Model Citizen
256(1)
A Strategy of Specialization
257(2)
Citizenship in Daily Life
259(4)
Distinguishing Big from Little Change
263(3)
Prod Change
266(4)
Fact and Value: Convention or Constraint?
270(4)
Why Analysis Is Conservative
274(3)
Morality and Policy Analysis
277(1)
Notes
278(3)
PART 4 Policy Analysis 281(126)
Doing Better and Feeling Worse: The Political Pathology of Health Policy
284(25)
Paradoxes, Principles, Axioms, Identities, and Laws
285(5)
Why There Is a Crisis
290(1)
Does Anyone Win?
291(1)
Curing the Sickness of Health
292(3)
Alternative Health Policies
295(1)
Market versus Administrative Mechanisms
296(5)
Thought and Action
301(1)
Planning Health-System Agencies
302(4)
The Future
306(2)
Notes
308(1)
Learning from Education: If We're Still Stuck on the Problems, Maybe We're Taking the Wrong Exam
309(17)
Compensation without Education
309(5)
Educational Opportunity without Social Equality
314(2)
The Objective of Having Objectives
316(4)
Politicization without Politics
320(3)
Clarification of Objectives as a Social Process
323(2)
Notes
325(1)
A Tax by Any Other Name: The Donor-Directed Automatic Percentage-Contribution Bonus, A Budget Alternative for Financing Governmental Support of Charity
326(26)
Budget Alternatives
327(2)
Proposals, Criteria, and Consequences
329(12)
What Difference Does a Government Subsidy Make? A Sensitivity Analysis
341(2)
How Much of Which Problems Are We Prepared to Live with? An Analysis of Criteria
343(2)
Political Feasibility
345(3)
Testing the Percentage-Contribution Bonus
348(1)
Notes
349(3)
Distribution of Urban Services
352(33)
Patterns of Resource Distribution
355(2)
Three Patterns: The More, The More; Compensation; and Resultants
357(2)
An Explanation
359(2)
Adam Smith in Action
361(4)
Judging Outcomes
365(5)
Altering Outcomes
370(13)
Notes
383(2)
Analysis as Craft
385(22)
Solutions as Programs
391(2)
Solutions as Hypotheses
393(2)
Solutions as Social Artifacts
395(2)
The Craft of Problem Solving
397(4)
Speaking Truth to Power
401(5)
Notes
406(1)
Appendix 407(16)
Structure of the School
409(2)
Faculty
411(1)
Curriculum
412(4)
Administration
416(2)
Afterword
418(1)
Notes
419(4)
Index 423

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