Policy and Agenda Setting - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 15
About This Presentation
Title:

Policy and Agenda Setting

Description:

'Public policy is a desired course of action and interaction which is ... Chaps. 1 - 4. The study of agenda setting, is the study of social change and stability. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:531
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 16
Provided by: vernons9
Category:
Tags: agenda | chaps | policy | setting

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Policy and Agenda Setting


1
Policy and Agenda Setting
  • Psychology 302 - 2003

2
Public Policy
  • Public policy is a desired course of action and
    interaction which is to serve as a guideline in
    the allocation of resources necessary to realise
    societal goals and objectives, decided upon and
    made publicly known by the legislator. (Hanekom,
    1987, p.8)

3
Policy Science Purposes
  • Instrumental Research that shapes the direction
    of change or the direction of public policy
  • Conceptual Research aimed at changing the way
    people think about social problems and solutions
  • Persuasive Research conducted to persuade policy
    makers to adopt or support a particular position
  • Predictive Research designed to forecast change
    or whether change will be accepted

4
Public Policy
  • Policy Making
  • Policy Implementation
  • Policy Analysis
  • Policy Evaluation

5
Policy Making
  • Process of policy making
  • 5 phases
  • Identification of goal
  • Authorisation to act by policy-maker
  • Public statement of the intentions
  • Execution
  • Evaluation-feedback on results of policy
  • "Public policies are the outputs of the political
    process and the inputs to the administrative
    process" (Hanekom, 1991, p.2)
  • Theories of policy making process
  • Who participates? How?
  • How does something get onto the policy agenda?
    (see agenda setting)

6
5 phases
  • Identification of goal
  • Authorisation to act by policy-maker
  • Public statement of the intentions
  • Execution
  • Evaluation-feedback on results of policy

7
Policy Analysis
  • An attempt to measure the costs and benefits of
    policy alternatives or to evaluate the efficacy
    of existing policies
  • Are policies indeed contributing to the common
    good
  • Is the policy effective in achieving its primary
    goals
  • Is the implementation effective
  • Analysing the theory/ideology that informs the
    policy
  • Analysing the formulation of the problem or
    issue that gave rise to the policy solution

8
Agenda setting
  • Social systems have to have agendas
  • Prioritise the work, problems or change
  • The press may not be successful much of the time
    in telling people what to think, but is
    stunningly successful in telling its readers what
    to think about (Cohen, 1963)
  • The definition of the alternatives is the
    supreme instrument of power (Schattschneider,
    1960)

9
Agenda Setting
  • Dearing, J. and Rogers , E. (1996). Agenda
    Setting. California Sage. Chaps. 1 - 4.
  • The study of agenda setting, is the study of
    social change and stability. Agenda setting is
    essentially a political process.
  • Ongoing competition among issue proponents to
    gain the attention of media professionals, the
    public and policy elites.

10
Agenda Setting
  • Key questions  
  • Why information about some issues is available
    and not others?
  • How is public opinion shaped?
  • Why certain issues are addressed through policy
    processes and not others?
  • How agendas are shaped and gain prominence on the
    agenda hierarchy

11
Topics and concepts
  • Agenda a set of issues, communicated in a
    hierarchy of importance (at a particular time)
  • Issue a social problem, often conflictual, that
    has received mass media coverage.
  • Valence Valence issues only have one legitimate
    side (e.g. child abuse)
  • Salience the degree to which an issue on the
    agenda is perceived as relatively important

12
(No Transcript)
13
Researching the Public Agenda
  • Polls - Opinion surveys
  • e.g. Most Important Problem (MIP)
  • Foreign affairs
  • Economic issues
  • Social control
  • Civil rights
  • Government
  • Hierarchy studies
  • Longitudinal studies
  • Compare results with Media agenda

14
Researching Agendas
  • Media Agenda
  • Content analysis
  • Quantitative analyses Number of stories as index
    of salience
  • Policy Agenda
  • Budget allocation
  • Laws enacted
  • Policy activitiy
  • Real-world indicators
  • Relatively unimportant in putting items on the
    agenda
  • Neither necessary nor sufficient

15
The issue-attention cycle The rise and fall of
issues on the public agenda.
1. Pre-problem stage A social problem exists
but has not yet attracted public
attention. Real-world indicators usually far
worse in this stage than they are by the time
public becomes interested.   2. Alarmed discovery
stage A dramatic event creates public alarm,
accompanied by optimism about ability to solve
the problem.   3. Realising the cost of solving
the problem Gradual recognition that solutions
are prohibitively expensive.   4. Decline of
public interest Issue slips down the agenda,
interest fades, because of high cost, and media
exposure creates public boredom.   5.
Post-problem stage Issue drops of the public
agenda, programmes, policies and organisations
formed around the issue persist.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com