1 / 15

Government Institutions and Policy Actors

Government Institutions and Policy Actors. Growth of Government. Growth (area and population) Increased complexity of society Business regulation Protection of social welfare America’s international role Citizen demands. Policy Stalemate and Capacity. Stalemate (gridlock)

forest
Télécharger la présentation

Government Institutions and Policy Actors

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Government Institutions and Policy Actors

  2. Growth of Government • Growth (area and population) • Increased complexity of society • Business regulation • Protection of social welfare • America’s international role • Citizen demands

  3. Policy Stalemate and Capacity • Stalemate (gridlock) • When decision makers are unable or unwilling to compromise in a manner that permits public policy action • Policy capacity • A government’s ability to identify and evaluate public problems, and to develop policies to deal with them

  4. The Governance Structure Of Policymaking • Formal: complexity and fragmentation • Federalism • Separation of powers • Informal • Public opinion • Interest groups • Policy subsystems

  5. Federalism • Evolution of federalism • Pre-Civil War • Dual federalism • Cooperative federalism • Continuing controversies • money • (State) expectations • State variation in policy capacity • Devolution of authority to the states (The pros and cons)

  6. Separation of Powers • What: power is shared among three branches • Legislative, executive, and judicial • Founders were concerned with possibility of government tyranny • Adds to the complexity of governing • Adds to the challenge of building consensus for policy action, especially between the legislature and executive

  7. Separation of Powers: Policymakers • Legislature – lawmaking • Bicameral system (House & Senate) • Committee system (division & specialization of labor) • Executive – law enforcing • President/bureaucracy involved in policy development • Bureaucratic structure • Judicial – law interpreting • Reactive rather than proactive • Judicial review

  8. Organizational Formats • Legislative organizations (e.g., committees, individual members, party leadership) • Executive branch organizations • Cabinet departments & their subagencies • Independent executive agencies (e.g., EPA, the various Executive Office of the President agencies) • Independent regulatory commissions • Courts (district, special jurisdiction, appellate, Supreme Court)

  9. Informal Actors: Public Opinion • Public opinion • Is important in a democratic system • Is fleeting • Many people are inattentive to politics and policy • Can be voiced in numerous ways • Can have an impact, if people are willing to take the time/make the effort • Can lead to interest group formation and activity • Salience and stability matter

  10. Informal Actors: Interest Groups • Important in politics, governance, and policymaking • Lobbying – all branches, both for/against policies • Money for elections • Use media • Information (substantive and political) • Litigation • Direct contact w/policymakers • Organize & mobilize • Influence & campaign

  11. Informal Actors: Policy Subsystems • Informal settings where policies are made • Have been called many different things • Subgovernments • Issue networks • Iron triangles

  12. Subsystems – Traditional “Iron Triangles” Bureaucratic Agency Policy Support Budget Programs POLICY Interest Group Congressional Committee/Sub Support Money

  13. Subsystems Today • Less autonomous than in the past • Greater visibility • More “outside” participation • More policy actors • Term “issue networks” used more now • Reflects evolution of U.S. policymaking • Still important, still provide avenues of participation for experts

  14. Policy Stalemate and Capacity, Revisited • Why does stalemate occur? • Constitutional design and divided gov’t • Complex problems • Public opinion and consensus • Organized interests • Ineffective political leadership • Personal relationships • And, perhaps, less-than-desirable policy capacity

More Related