Who makes public policy? : the struggle for control between Congress and the Executive

書誌事項

Who makes public policy? : the struggle for control between Congress and the Executive

edited by Robert S. Gilmour and Alexis A. Halley ; with original case studies by Diana Evans ... [et al.] ; sponsored by the National Academy of Public Administration, Washington, D.C.

Chatham House Publishers, c1994

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注記

"Case studies from the National Academy of Public Administration, Washington, D.C."

Includes bibliographical references (p. 371-386) and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Editors Robert S. Gilmour and Alexis A. Halley synthesize ten case studies sponsored by the National Academy of Public Administration that relate stories of congressional intervention and suggest, in sum, a new theory of congressional-executive relations. Arguing that Congress cannot be dismissed as a troublesome meddler in agency programs or as an inattentive bystander in its oversight role, Gilmour and Halley draw from these case histories the surprising conclusion that Congress in fact act regularly, with the exective branch, as a powerful "co-manager" of policy outlines and program details.

目次

  • The struggle for control of policy and program development, Robert S. Gilmour and Alexis A. Halley
  • accelerating implementation - alert and collision avoidance, Diana Evans
  • reconciling pork-barrel politics and national transportation policy, Diana Evans
  • "not in my backyard" - high level nuclear waste policy, James A. Thurber
  • hazardous waste disposal - the double-edged sword of the RCRA land-ban hammers, Alexis A. Halley
  • making up for lost time - the defense nuclear weapons complex clean-up, James A. Thurber
  • battling for budgetary savings - prospective payments for hospitals under Medicare, Alexis A. Halley
  • producing a reliable weapons system - advance medium range air-to-air missile (AMRAAM), Robert S. Gilmour and Eric Minkoff
  • improving military co-ordination - the Goldwater-Nichols reorganization of the Department of defense, Thomas L. McNaugher and Roger L. Sperry
  • resolving policy difference - foreign aid and human rights, G. Calvin Mackenzie
  • interjecting constituency concerns - foreign military arms sales, G. Calvin Mackenzie
  • co-managing policy and program development, Robert S. Gilmour and Alexis A. Halley.

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