Politics in States and Communities / Edition 15 available in Paperback
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Politics in States and Communities / Edition 15
- ISBN-10:
- 0205994725
- ISBN-13:
- 9780205994724
- Pub. Date:
- 01/23/2014
- Publisher:
- Pearson Education
- ISBN-10:
- 0205994725
- ISBN-13:
- 9780205994724
- Pub. Date:
- 01/23/2014
- Publisher:
- Pearson Education
![Politics in States and Communities / Edition 15](http://img.images-bn.com/static/redesign/srcs/images/grey-box.png?v11.8.5)
Politics in States and Communities / Edition 15
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Overview
Politics in States and Communities is distinguished by its focus on politics, its comparative approach, its concern with thorough explanation, its interest in policy, and its focus on conflicts in states and communities. Several themes are carried on throughout the book that emphasize the importance of politics at the state and community level including the “conflict management” theme which emphasizes the sources and nature of conflict in society, how key decision makers act in conflict situations, and how “politicos” emerge and determine “who gets what.”
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0133745767 / 9780133745764 Politics in States and Communities Plus MySearchLab with eText Access Card Package
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0205239927 / 9780205239924 MySearchLab with Pearson eText Valuepack Access Card
0205994725 / 9780205994724 Politics in States and Communities
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9780205994724 |
---|---|
Publisher: | Pearson Education |
Publication date: | 01/23/2014 |
Edition description: | New Edition |
Pages: | 576 |
Product dimensions: | 7.80(w) x 9.80(h) x 0.80(d) |
Table of Contents
Chapter 1. Politics in States and CommunitiesChapter 2. Democracy and Constitutionalism in the States
Chapter 3. States, Communities, and American Federalism
Chapter 4. Participation in State Politics
Chapter 5. Parties and Campaigns in the States
Chapter 6. Legislators in State Politics
Chapter 7. Governors in State Politics
Chapter 8. Bureaucratic Politics in States and Communities
Chapter 9. Courts, Crime, and Correctional Policy
Chapter 10. Governing America’s Communities
Chapter 11. Participation in Community Politics
Chapter 12. Metropolitics: Conflict in the Metropolis
Chapter 13. Community Power, Land Use, & The Environment
Chapter 14. The Politics of Taxation and Finance
Chapter 15. Politics and Civil Rights
Chapter 16. The Politics of Education
Chapter 17. The Politics of Poverty, Welfare, and Health
Preface
Political science, like other scientific disciplines, has developed a number of concepts and models to help describe and explain political life. These models are not really competitive in the sense that any one could be judged as the "best." Each focuses on separate elements of politics, and each helps us understand different things about political life.
We begin with a brief description of eight analytic models in political science and the potential contribution of each to the study of public policy:
- Institutional model
- Process model
- Rational model
- Incremental model
- Group model
- Elite model
- Public choice model
- Game theory model
Most public policies are a combination of rational planning, incrementalism, competition among groups, elite preferences, public choice, political processes, and institutional influences. Throughout this volume we employ these models, both singly and in combination, to describe and explain public policy. However, certain chapters rely more on one model than another.
We attempt to describe and explain public policy by the use of these various analytic models. Readers are not only informed about public policy in a variety of key domestic policy areas; they are also encouraged to utilize these conceptual models in political science to explain the causes andconsequences of public policies in these areas. The policy areas studied are:
- Criminal justice
- Health and welfare
- Education
- Economic policy
- Taxation
- International trade and immigration
- Environmental protection
- Civil rights
- State and local spending and services
- National defense
Any of these policy areas might be studied by using more than one model. Frequently our selection of a particular analytic model to study a specific polity area was based as much on pedagogical considerations as on anything else. We simply wanted to demonstrate how political scientists employ analytic models. Once readers are familiar with the nature and uses of analytic models in political science, they may find it interesting to explore the utility of models other than the ones selected by the author in the explanation of particular policy outcomes. For example, we use an elitist model to discuss civil rights policy, but the reader may wish to view civil rights policy from the perspective of group theory. We employ public choice theory to discuss environmental policy, but the reader might prefer studying environmental problems from the perspective of the rational model.
Each chapter concludes with a series of propositions, which are derived from one or more analytic models and which attempt to summarize the policies discussed. The purpose of these summaries is to suggest the kinds of policy explanations that can be derived from analytic models and tie the policy material back to one or another of the models.
The new 10th Edition of Understanding Public Policy is a substantial revision. A much more extensive review of "The Policymaking Process" appears early in the text, with many new policy discussions: "Is Welfare Reform Working?"; "Does Crime Pay?"; "The Fed at Work"; "Replacing the Income Tax"; "Public Policy and Hispanic Americans"; "Public Policy and Gender Equality;" Public Policy and the Disabled"; "Federalism Revived?"; and "Terrorism and Unanticipated Threats to America."
This edition also updates controversial discussions such as: "Crime and Guns," "The Drug War," "RICO versus Liberty," "Social Security Reform," "Health Care Access and Costs," "Educational Reform and Parental Choice," "Tax Policy and the Special Interests," "Elite Gains from Trade," "Mass Losses from Trade," "Environmentalism versus Rational Public Choice," "Public Policy and Affirmative Action," "How Money and Power Flow to Washington," and "The Gulf War as a Case Study."
In short, this volume is not only an introduction to the study of public polity but also an introduction to the models political scientists use to describe and explain political life.
Thomas R. Dye
Florida State University