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Title: Administrative details


1
Administrative details
  • Syllabus http//www.uvm.edu/jfarley/pa306/pa306s
    yllabus.doc
  • Please hand in all assignments electronically as
    e-mail attachments, RTF or MSWord documents

2
What is Public Policy?
  • Introduction to PA 306
  • Josh Farley (with thanks to Chris Koliba)
  • August 29, 2005

3
What is policy?
  • Todays newspaper
  • Grad student parking memo
  • Universal health care in Vermont (and elsewhere)

4
Policy as a noun
  • a definite course of action adopted for the sake
    of expediency, facility, etc.
  • a course of action adopted and pursued by a
    government ruler, political party, etc.
  • action or procedure conforming to or considered
    with reference to prudence or expediency.
  • (Websters unabridged)
  • A solution to a problem
  • Policy is a rational attempt to attain
    objectives.

5
Policy as a verbThe Policy Cycle/Process
  • Identify objectives
  • Identify alternative courses of action for
    achieving objectives
  • Predict the possible consequences of each
    alternative
  • Evaluate the possible consequences of each
    alternative
  • Select the alternative that maximizes the
    attainment of objectives.

6
What about PUBLIC policy?
  • Is the graduate parking memo a matter of public
    policy?
  • Why/why not?
  • Is health care in Vermont a matter of public
    policy?
  • Why/why not?

7
So what makes a policy public?
  • What is public?
  • Does public policy always imply a role for
    government?

8
Public -- Private
  • Synonyms?
  • What distinguishes Public from private
    interests?

9
How does public policy relate to other
disciplines?
  • Economics
  • The allocation of scarce resources among
    alternative desirable ends
  • Political science
  • Sociology
  • Hard sciences
  • Ethics

10
Legacy of the Enlightenment Philosophy
  • The self comes of age
  • Rational, self interested actors
  • Dangers of factionalism Federalist Papers
  • Acceptance of special interests
  • Use of checks and balances to keep interests in
    check.

11
What does it mean to be/act rational?
  • Scientific
  • Application of scientific methods to determine
    problems and derive solutions to those problems.
  • Science, derived from the Latin word scientia,
    meaning having knowledge. Birkland (p.7)

12
Rational policy cycle
  • Identify objectives
  • Identify alternative courses of action for
    achieving objectives
  • Predict the possible consequences of each
    alternative
  • Evaluate the possible consequences of each
    alternative
  • Select the alternative that maximizes the
    attainment of objectives.

13
Science as a social construct.
  • Scientific paradigms
  • Positivist
  • Interpretivist
  • Post normal
  • Empirical vs. Normative Perspectives

14
Scientific Method vs. Ideology
  • Scientific Method
  • Observe
  • Form hypotheses
  • Test hypotheses? discard if falsified
  • Form theory
  • Test theory? discard if falsified
  • Ideology
  • Refuse to test theories, or refuse to abandon
    them when experiments/new observations prove them
    wrong

15
How ARE public decisions made?
  • Lindbloms Incrementalism
  • An attempt to implement one policy almost always
    brings new problems onto the agenda, meaning that
    the step called implementation and the step
    called agenda building collapse into each other
    One groups solution often is another groups
    problem From the seedbed of implementation,
    then, new policy problems grow and are plucked
    for the agenda in never-ending succession.
    Lindblom WoodhouseP.11
  • Stones policy paradox

16
Limits of rationality
  • The capacity of the human mind for formulating
    and solving complex problems is very small
    compared with the size of the problem whose
    solutions is required for objectively rational
    behavior in the real worldor even for a
    reasonable approximation to such objective
    rationality. Simon, Models of Man (1957, p.198)

17
How ARE private decisions made?
  • Rational actor
  • What is rational?
  • Are people purely rational, or also emotional and
    spiritual?

18
  • Self interest
  • Always wants more
  • Purely competitive
  • homogenous globules of desire
  • Or are we cooperative, social animals, concerned
    about the future that differ across cultures?
  • e.g. H. comunicus, concern for fairness and
    community preferences
  • H. naturalis, concern for sustainability and
    whole system preferences
  • Count off by 2s. All 2s leave room

19
Group 1
  • Serious flu will kill 600 people
  • Choice A Conventional vaccine will save 200
    people
  • Choice B Experimental vaccine has 1/3 chance of
    saving everyone, 2/3 chance of saving no one
  • Mark your choice and leave room

20
Group 2
  • Serious flu will kill 600 people
  • Choice A Conventional vaccine will result in
    death of 400 people
  • Choice B Experimental vaccine has 1/3 chance of
    saving everyone, 2/3 chance of saving no one
  • Mark your choice

21
Checks Balances Clearly defined roles?
  • Legislative branch creates policy
  • Executive branch implements policy
  • Judicial branch determines if policy is legal

22
Politics-Administration Dichotomy
  • Wilson, Goodnow
  • Appleby, Waldo
  • Scientific efficiencies vs. democratic
    effectiveness

23
Politics A Necessary Evil?
  • Politic
  • 1.sagacious prudent.
  • 2. Shrewd artful.
  • 3. expedient judicious.
  • (Websters unabridged dictionary)
  • Derived from Greek politikos civic, equiv. to
    polit(es) citizen.

24
Politics noun.
  • 1. the science or art of political government.
  • 2. the practice or profession of conducting
    political affairs.
  • 3. political affairs.
  • 4. political methods or maneuvers.
  • 5. political principles or opinions.
  • 6. use of intrigue or strategy in obtaining any
    position pf power or control, as in business,
    university, etc. (Websters Unabridged Dic.)

25
  • What does it mean to be political?
  • Does the adage that everything is political
    hold up?
  • Where might politics have come into play
  • For the parking policy?
  • For health care policy?

26
The policy paradox
  • Account for the possibilities of changing ones
    objectives
  • Of pursuing contradictory objectives
    simultaneously
  • Of winning by appearing to lose and turning lose
    into an appearance of victory
  • Of attaining objectives by portraying oneself as
    having attained them.
  • Stone P.9

27
Actors matter
  • Who were the actors in
  • The parking policy
  • Health care policy

28
  • Essentially, public policy is about
    decision-making and the process through which
    these decisions get made and evaluated.
  • Politics makes the distinctions between actors
    blurry.

29
Some Policy Actors
  • Legislatures
  • Interest groups/ Non-profit organizations
  • Courts
  • Consultants
  • Elites
  • Bureaucracies
  • Policy Networks
  • Think tanks
  • Bureaucracies
  • Public administrators
  • Citizens
  • Business
  • Media

30
  • How people define their preferences depends to a
    large extent on how choices are presented to them
    and by whom. Stone P.10
  • Politics involves seeking allies and organizing
    cooperation in order to compete with opponents.
    Stone P.24

31
  • The study of politics is the attempt to explain
    the various ways in which power is exercised in
    the everyday world and how that power is used to
    allocate resources and benefits to some people
    and groups, and costs and burdens to other people
    and groups.
  • Birkland p. 5

32
  • Shared meanings motivate people to action and
    meld individual striving into collective action.
    Ideas are at the center of all political
    conflict. Policy making, in turn, is a constant
    struggle over the criteria for classification,
    the boundaries of categories, and the definition
    of ideals that guide the way people behave.
    Stone P.11

33
A Democratic Imperative?
  • What role should ordinary citizens play within
    public policy development and implementation?
  • Weak versus strong democracy
  • Can we have too much of a good thing?
  • To enhance the role of reason and analysis in
    policy making, must a society surrender some
    aspects of democracy? Can a society enjoy both
    more reasoned and more democratic policy making?
    Lindblom and Woodhouse p.7

34
How do we talk about politics?
  • What are the views of those who you speak with
    about politics?
  • A. Mostly those you agree with
  • B. Mostly those you disagree with
  • C. A balance of both agree and disagree
  • with
  • D. You dont talk to people about politics

35
  • With whom do you speak about politics with?
    (check all that apply)
  • A. Family which ones
  • B. Friends which ones
  • C. Professional/work colleagues
  • D. Strangers and acquaintances
  • E. Fellow students and faculty

36
  • What can we do to ensure that we are able to talk
    about our political views and perspectives in
    this classroom?
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