Now redesigned for increased user friendliness, this readable and practical introduction to the public policy process is intended for students in either traditional academic or professional programs at the undergraduate or graduate level. The author's direct writing style and extensive use of examples will also appeal to practitioners. The book offers an extensive overview of the best current thinking on the policy process, with an emphasis on accessibility and synthesis rather than novelty and abstraction. It has many features that make it equally useful as a ready reference, including myriad definitions throughout each chapter; an annotated bibliography; an introduction to web-based research, with a guide to the most important and reliable public policy research sites; and additional reading suggestions. New for this edition are chapter-at-a-glance introductions; new case studies for major chapters; new Questions-for-Discussion; and sidebars for definitions.
I LOVE talking about Policy! This was recommended by a professor for my Masters program in Library and Information Science. For someone like me who never actually HAD to take a course in U.S. Government, it proved to be an enlightening and comprehensive look at the basic components of the policy process. Birkland offers some pretty level perspective on thinking about stakeholders, triggering events, intended and unintended consequences, and he even delves into a brief introduction of policy theory.
While quite dense, this book possessed a lot of valuable information on the policy process. The overall structure of the text was logical. There were a handful of glaringly biased statements which took away from the credibility of the sections they were in. Chapter 11 could have been synthesized more similarly to the rest of the text. My level of understanding dropped in reading about the theoretical frameworks. (It was not useful to me in current form.)
There are a number of books "out there" on the nature of the public policy process. This is one of the better textbooks on the subject.
The book begins with a solid chapter on the nature of public policy and how we study the phenomenon. This flows into the second chapter, which focuses on the history of public policy (going back to Constitutional design) and culminates with a discussion (albeit brief) of the fragmentation of the policy process.
The next two chapters explore key actors--official governmental actors like the President and Congress and unofficial actors such as media and think tanks.
Thereafter, the text focuses on the various "stages" of the policy process--from agenda setting to policy types to policy design and the toolbox of policies to implementation.
The volume concludes with an examination of several theories of the policy process.
This book isn't the best of the lot; however, it is a good, serviceable introduction to the policy process.
I enjoyed some sections of this book, especially the first 3 chapters. I find that the there are other books on public policy that do a better job of outlining the policy process.