Agendas, alternatives, and public policies

Bibliographic Information

Agendas, alternatives, and public policies

John W. Kingdon ; with new foreword by James A. Thurber

(Longman classics in political science)

Longman, c2003

2nd ed

  • : pbk

Available at  / 25 libraries

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Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Re-issued as part of the "Longman Classics in Political Science" series, Kingdon's renowned work features a new Foreword exploring the book's historical and enduring contributions. Kingdon's landmark work on agenda setting and policy formation is now offered in a Longman Classics Edition. This enduring work of original research, drawn from interviews with people in the U.S. federal government over the course of four years, examines the questions of how issues get to be issues for legislators. The book grapples with the questions: How do subjects come to officials' attention? How are the alternatives from which they choose generated? How is the governmental agenda set? Why does an idea's time come when it does? Hailed as one of the finest books about public policy- making, and winner of the 1994 Aaron Wildavsky Award, this book's rich detail and engaging prose make it a text that both students and instructors will savor.

Table of Contents

  • Foreword. 1. How Does an Idea's Time Come? 2. Participants on the Inside of Government. 3. Outside of Government, But Not Just Looking In. 4. Processes: Origins, Rationality, Incrementalism, and Garbage Cans. 5. Problems. 6. The Policy Primeval Soup. 7. The Political Stream. 8. The Policy Window, and Joining the Streams. 9. Wrapping Things Up. 10. Some Further Reflections: New Case Studies Thoughts About the Modeling. Appendix on Methods: The Interviews
  • Coding
  • Case Studies
  • Noninterview Measures of Agenda Status.

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