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Reforms at Risk: What Happens After Major Policy Changes Are Enacted (Princeton Studies in American Politics)
 
 

Reforms at Risk: What Happens After Major Policy Changes Are Enacted (Princeton Studies in American Politics) [Kindle Edition]

Eric M. Patashnik

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Editorial Reviews

Review

Tremendous effort is invested by political scientists in an attempt to understanding the conditions that produce significant policy change. In this important book, Patashnik considers the fate of major policy changes.
(S.Q. Kelly Choice )

Eric M. Patashnik's excellent book . . . is an important book, for obvious reasons--as the Obama Administration settles in to a long, hard slog of reform across the broad swath of government activity, it will need to understand not only how to get reforms passed, but how to make sure they're carried out.
(Elaine Kamarck Democracy )

Product Description

Reforms at Risk is the first book to closely examine what happens to sweeping and seemingly successful policy reforms after they are passed. Most books focus on the politics of reform adoption, yet as Eric Patashnik shows here, the political struggle does not end when major reforms become enacted. Why do certain highly praised policy reforms endure while others are quietly reversed or eroded away?

Patashnik peers into some of the most critical arenas of domestic-policy reform--including taxes, agricultural subsidies, airline deregulation, emissions trading, welfare state reform, and reform of government procurement--to identify the factors that enable reform measures to survive. He argues that the reforms that stick destroy an existing policy subsystem and reconfigure the political dynamic. Patashnik demonstrates that sustainable reforms create positive policy feedbacks, transform institutions, and often unleash the ''creative destructiveness'' of market forces.

Reforms at Risk debunks the argument that reforms inevitably fail because Congress is prey to special interests, and the book provides a more realistic portrait of the possibilities and limits of positive change in American government. It is essential reading for scholars and practitioners of U.S. politics and public policy, offering practical lessons for anyone who wants to ensure that hard-fought reform victories survive.


Product Details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 3488 KB
  • Print Length: 248 pages
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press (August 25, 2008)
  • Sold by: Amazon Digital Services
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B001O5BEQO
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #324,007 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Popular Highlights

 (What's this?)
&quote;
My central argument is that sustainable reforms reconfigure political dynamics. They disrupt longstanding patterns of governance, recast institutions, upset existing power monopolies, and create policy feedback effects that render it difficult or unattractive for the government to reverse course. &quote;
Highlighted by 6 Kindle users
&quote;
Rather than a one-shot static affair, policy reform must he seen as a dynamic process, in which political forces seeking to protect a general-interest reform may he opposed by forces seeking to undermine it. &quote;
Highlighted by 5 Kindle users
&quote;
ordinary citizens were upset about the complexity of the tax code, and the TRA fell far short of its tax-simplification aspirations. &quote;
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