Policy Innovation in State GovernmentIowa State University Press, 1994 - 169 pages Although it sometimes seems that governmental policies rarely change, American state governments do adopt innovations. This study considers why the states try new approaches to policy problems. It analyzes innovations from campaign financing and sunset laws to public transportation and regulating sexual behavior, seeking to determine what forces produce policy changes. Policy Innovation in State Government, the result of studies considering individual innovations, is an effort to make sense of a striking finding: State characteristics that largely accounted for some changes were of no value in accounting for others. Nice proposes a general theory based on a state's problem environment, resources, and orientation to government power. This is a book that examines an important question, offers an interesting theory, and makes a reasonable effort to test it. It will be valuable for those interested in state government, public policy-making, intergovernmental relations, and public administration. |
Contents
Teacher Competency Testing | 38 |
Balanced Budget Amendment to the U S Constitution | 50 |
Sunset Laws | 63 |
Copyright | |
8 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
activity addition adoption agency amendment Amtrak analysis areas associated attention balanced budget behavior benefits calling campaign candidates chapter comparatively competency testing conservative considerable consistent constitutional costs culture decisions deficits Democratic economic effect efforts election electorates emphasis encourage equality evidence existence expected factors federal finance findings forces funding greater groups higher ideology important inclinations income indicates individual influence innovation involves issue least legislative less liberal limited major measures noted officials operations organizations particularly party party ideology percent performance political population preservation problem environment produce programs property tax proposals public finance rail railroads reduce reflect reform regarding relationships relatively relief Republican requirement response result role scores shape significant similar social sodomy spending studies subsidies substantial sunset laws Table teacher tend tion transportation variety