British politics and the policy process : an arena approach

書誌事項

British politics and the policy process : an arena approach

A.G. Jordan, J.J. Richardson

Allen & Unwin, 1987

  • : pbk.

大学図書館所蔵 件 / 28

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注記

Bibliography: p. [265]-280

Includes index

内容説明・目次

巻冊次

ISBN 9780043201855

内容説明

In recent years there have been considerable changes in the ways in which politics and policy making are studied. The student is faced not only by a diversity of theoretical approaches but also with competing vocabularies and specialist terminologies. This text provides an introduction to the workings of the British political process and clarifies study methods. Drawing widely on case study material and memoirs of ex-ministers and civil servants, the authors show how political decisions are taken and policies adopted in cabinet, inside Parliament and in the political parties. They argue that Parliament is marginal in political decision making, and also powerfully reject the thesis of adversary politics.

目次

  • Part 1 The contemporary language of policy-making problems in studying the political process. Part 2 Policy-making arenas: the public arena
  • the parliamentary arena and adversary politics
  • the party arena
  • the cabinet arena
  • the bureaucratic arena
  • the pressure-group arena. Part 3 Allocation and implementation
  • budgetary politics
  • the implementation process. Part 4 Britain as a post-industrial society.
巻冊次

: pbk. ISBN 9780043201862

内容説明

In recent years there have been considerable changes in the ways in which politics and policy making are studied. The student is faced not only by a diversity of theoretical approaches but also with competing vocabularies and specialist terminologies. This text provides an introduction to the workings of the British political process and clarifies study methods. Drawing widely on case study material and memoirs of ex-ministers and civil servants, the authors show how political decisions are taken and policies adopted in cabinet, inside Parliament and in the political parties. They argue that Parliament is marginal in political decision making, and also powerfully reject the thesis of adversary politics.

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