Public Policy: Continuity and ChangeMcGraw-Hill, 2006 - 339 páginas This new text provides students with a broad survey of public policy theory and history, detailed in plain language. It focuses on distributive, redistributive, competitive regulatory, protective regulatory, and morality policies. It incorporates pluralists, elitists, state-centered, agenda-setting, problem definition, and social movement approaches into a model of policy regimes useful in explaining long-term policy stability and short bursts of policy change. The text covers ten substantive policy areas: social welfare, health care, civil rights, environmental protection, labor, competitive regulatory, fertility control, criminal justice, education, and economics, and provides extensive discussions about recent policy changes and contemporary policy debates. |
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Página 224
... rates . 3 . Mandated that all rates be published and adhered to . 4 . 5 . Prohibited undue preference and higher rates for the short hauls than for the long hauls . Gave the Interstate Commerce Commission responsibility for monitoring ...
... rates . 3 . Mandated that all rates be published and adhered to . 4 . 5 . Prohibited undue preference and higher rates for the short hauls than for the long hauls . Gave the Interstate Commerce Commission responsibility for monitoring ...
Página 257
... Rates Rate Rate Year ( per 1,000 people ) Year ( per 1,000 people ) 1950 24.1 1980 15.9 1955 25.0 1985 15.8 1960 23.7 1990 16.7 1965 19.4 1995 14.8 1970 18.4 2000 14.4 1975 14.6 2002 13.9 SOURCE : U.S. Census Bureau , Statistical ...
... Rates Rate Rate Year ( per 1,000 people ) Year ( per 1,000 people ) 1950 24.1 1980 15.9 1955 25.0 1985 15.8 1960 23.7 1990 16.7 1965 19.4 1995 14.8 1970 18.4 2000 14.4 1975 14.6 2002 13.9 SOURCE : U.S. Census Bureau , Statistical ...
Página 275
... rates are fairly accurate indicators of violent crime . These rates have been rela- tively stable over the past 40 years . In the early 1960s murder rates were around 5 murders per 100,000 people . These rates climbed to close to 10 by ...
... rates are fairly accurate indicators of violent crime . These rates have been rela- tively stable over the past 40 years . In the early 1960s murder rates were around 5 murders per 100,000 people . These rates climbed to close to 10 by ...
Contenido
Using Policy Theory to Explain Policy Change | 4 |
Why Government and Public Policies | 11 |
Government Public Policy and the Market | 17 |
Derechos de autor | |
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20th century abortion administration affirmative action African Americans agencies agenda Amendment areas benefits bill Chapter charter schools cities classical economic Clean Air Clean Air Act coalition committee companies competitive regulatory policies conservative corporate costs created crime decision dominant drug economic emerged established example expansion families federal government George H. W. Bush House impact increased industrial interest groups involved issues Keynesian Keynesian economic labor policy leaders liberal major Medicaid Medicare ment monopoly National Office organizations percent policy change policy paradigm policy regime political pollution poverty power arrangements president prison pro-choice pro-life problem produced programs prohibited protection public policies public schools punctuated equilibrium racial rates Reagan recipients regulations role segregation Senate shift social movements Social Security stressors Supreme Court taxes television theory tion U.S. Census Bureau U.S. Supreme Court unemployment unions vote vouchers women workers