Title: An Overview of the Pennsylvania Policy Database Project
1An Overview of the Pennsylvania Policy Database
Project
2Outline of Presentation
- Review of Database Design
- Project Benefits
- The PA Project Compared to the National Project
- The Pennsylvania Project Organization
- Information on our Website
3Benefits to State Government
- Policy-makers and aides can more efficiently
research recurring issues and previously-tried
solutions, avoiding need to reinvent the wheel.
It supplements existing information-retrieval
systems. - Integration of government records, news accounts,
and opinion data should facilitate fuller
insights into the underlying causes and politics
of issues. - Comparability with national database should
provide deeper understanding of the
inter-relationship of federal and state policies.
4Benefits to State Government
- The project is consistent with public demands for
increased transparency in government. - It provides staffers and archivists with a new
tool to respond to public inquiries. - The project provides a centralized index to
different kinds of state records that are housed
in decentralized archives, and it provides
incentives to upgrade record-keeping efforts.
5Benefits to Educators, Students, Researchers,
Journalists, and the Public
- Provides journalists, the public, and university
teachers, researchers, and students with free,
web-based tools to better understand and analyze
state politics and policies. - Should also be useful to teachers and researchers
interested in federalism, public policy
development, legislative politics, urban
politics, local government, and comparative
politics (the comparison of political and
policies across national and sub-national
governments). - Could attract talented students into careers in
state government (also a benefit to the state).
6The National Policy Agendas Project
- The national project was designed by political
scientists Frank R. Baumgartner of Penn State and
Bryan D. Jones of the University of Washington. - Housed at the University of Washington, the
project has been constructed and funded over the
last 15 years with support from the National
Science Foundation. - The database allows users to integrate with a few
mouse clicks a wide range of US government
records, news media accounts, and public opinion
data all coded by more than 200 major and minor
policy topics from 1947 to the present.
7Advantages of the National Project
- The national project is a unique database that
allows systematic study of policy development
over long periods of time and across venues and
governments. - Government archives are generally organized to
maximize information retrieval, an important
function. Records are indexed in multiple
categories and depend heavily on key-word search. - But as a result, they are not organized into
consistent categories over time, making it
difficult to fully understand the reasons for
change and to recognize important patterns and
trends. Language changes can fool key-word
search strategies.
8Advantages of the National Project
- Comparability Over Time. The database is not
fooled by changes in the organization of
government agencies, legislative operations
(e.g., the number or names of committees),
budgets, or the language of law or policy. - Mutually Exclusive Categories. The database
files each record in a single category but also
refers researchers to related categories and
original documents. It avoids double-counting
policy activity. - Comparability Across Venues. The database allows
researchers to trace policy activity across
venues (committee hearings, legislation,
executive orders, court decisions, budgets, news
accounts, public opinion polling) and
governments.
9Comparability Across Governments
- Researchers are now constructing projects with
similar codebooks, datasets, and decision-rules
for the following governments -
- US (The National Project) Canada
- European Union England
- France Belgium
- Denmark Pennsylvania
- Other States?
10Comparability Across Data Sets
- US (1947-2004)
- Congressional Hearings
- Public Laws
- Executive Orders
- State of the Union Addresses
- US Supreme Court Decisions
- Federal Budgets
- New York Times
- Congressional Quarterly
- Gallup Polls
- PA (1979-2004)
- Legislative Hearings
- Acts, Bills, Resolutions
- Executive Orders
- Governors Budget Addresses
- PA Supreme Court Decisions
- State Budgets
- Governors News Digests
- Governing Magazine
- State Polls
11Policy Coding each piece of data is assigned a
single code based on its policy area. The
national codebook includes the following 20 Major
Topic Codes
- 1 Macroeconomics
- 2 Civil Rights, Liberties
- 3 Health
- 4 Agriculture
- 5 Labor, Employment, Immigration
- 6 Education
- 7 Environment
- 8 Energy
- 10 Transportation
- 12 Law, Crime, Family
- 13 Social Welfare
- 14 Community Development
- 16 Defense
- 17 Space, Science, Technology, Communications
- 18 Foreign Trade
- 19 International Affairs
- 20 Govt. Operations
- 24 State and Local Administration
12The Pennsylvania Policy Codebook
- We attempted to adhere as closely as possible to
the national codebook when redesigning it to
account for state politics. All major topic codes
are the same, but with some wording changes - 1 Fiscal and Economic Issues (not Macroeconomics)
- 20 State Government Operations (not Government
Operations) - 24 Local Government and Governance (not State
and Local Administration)
13Examples of New Subtopics Appropriate to State
Government
- We added 19 new subtopics incorporating policy
activities associated with state and local
government - Examples are
- 345 Provision and Regulation of Ambulance
Services - 712 Regulation of Hunting, Fishing, and
Recreational Boating - 1212 Probate and Estate Law
- 1213 Property and Real Estate Law
- 1214 State Tort Law and Tort Law Reform
- 1402 Zoning and Growth Management
- 1411 General State Economic Development
- 1527 Regulation of Services (Except Health Care)
- 2016 State Lottery Operations
14Organization of the PA Project
- The plan is to complete construction of the
database for the years 1979-2006 by the end of
2007 and provide an accessible website by 2008. - The project is guided by three advisory
committees - A bipartisan General Assembly Advisory Committee
- A University Advisory Committee
- A Committee of Directors of Legislative Service
Agencies and State Record Centers
15Six Universities Participate in the PA Project
- Temple University College of Liberal Arts
(project HQ) - The Graduate School of Public and International
Affairs, University of Pittsburgh - The Heinz School of Public Policy and Management,
- Carnegie Mellon University
- Penn State University, University Park
- Penn State University, Harrisburg
- The Fels Institute of Government, University of
Pennsylvania.
16Project Direction
- Each university team is led by a faculty member
who administers grant funds and provides general
oversight. - Each university team also has a graduate research
manager (GRM) who provides day-to-day direction
to student researchers, is responsible for
quality control, and maintains communication with
the Temple staff. - Each university team includes 4 to 6 researchers
who abstract and code records by policy area. A
total of 27 GRMs and researchers are working this
summer.
17Processing Records
- Student researchers abstract bills, resolutions,
hearings, and news articles. Students do not
apply policy codes to records for which they
created the abstract. - Using the policy codebook but working separately,
two different students then code each record.
The goal is to achieve 90 inter-coder
reliability for major topics and 75 for minor
topics. - The graduate research manager checks student work
and resolves differences in coding. The GRM
meets with researchers each week to go over their
work and discuss hard cases.
18Assignments Processed
19University Assignments
- Although the decentralized organization of the
project presents challenges, it also has
advantages. - Governors news digests are not centrally
archived. - Governor Dick Thornburghs news digests (1979-86)
are at the University of Pittsburgh. - Governor Robert P. Caseys news digests (1987-94)
are at Penn States University Park Campus. - News digests for the period 1995-2006 are
archived in the Capitol complex in Harrisburg.
20Project Website Includes Codebook, Forms, and
Other Information
- Our web site is at www.temple.edu/papolicy.
Although data are not yet available, you can see
our code book, some coding forms, and the faculty
leaders, graduate students, and researchers at
each campus. It also lists members of our
Commonwealth advisory committees. - Through our website, you can also reach the
national project (or go directly to
www.policyagendas.org) and try using it to
analyze policy change since World War II. - And through our website you can reach the
Comparative Agendas Project at Penn State
University and learn more about projects in
Europe and Canada.