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American Public Policy: Promise and Performance

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American Public Policy will provide you with a comprehensive overview of the policy and policy-making process. From procedural approaches and policy instruments to in-depth analysis of specific policy issues, B. Guy Peters does not shy away from the complexity of governmental procedure and ensures that the mechanisms of the policy process are understandable through the discussion of topical policy areas.    

The Twelfth Edition c overs how the background for policy in the United States has changed dramatically over the past several years in the midst of political polarization and gridlock, unemployment and recessions, and calls for greater diversity and inclusion. New topics include the eroding trust in government, the COVID-19 pandemic and relief packages, the expanding national debt, the rising costs of health care and calls for "Medicare for All", the rollback of environmental regulations under the Trump administration, and the rebuilding of alliances abroad.

592 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1986

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B. Guy Peters

135 books3 followers

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Luigi Berinde.
22 reviews
April 1, 2023
I know it might be cringe to mark a textbook as read, but my professor literally made us read this book (12th edition, not 7th) from START to END, so you’re CRAZY if you think im not gonna mark this as read.

I HATED THIS. HATED IT. Public policy is one of those things that’s not really complicated but is made out to be complicated just so people can claim they are experts. This whole book was just a whole lot of sentences amounting to absolutely nothing. HATED IT!
Profile Image for Steven Peterson.
Author 19 books329 followers
May 25, 2015
This is a textbook on public policy that has gone through many editions. The substance is very good; sometimes the writing style is a bit of a challenge.

The b ook is organized sensibly. The first part explores what we mean by public policy, the key structures that affect policymaking in the U.S. (e.g., federalism and separation of powers), and models of policy-making.

Part Two? The making of public policy is the focus. Stages of the policy process are considered--as well as budgeting. The section has separate chapters on agenda setting, legitimating policy choices, implementation, budgeting, and program evaluation and change.

Part Three is valuable, as it examines different substantive policy issues, including, among others, economic policy, tax policy, health policy, and energy and the environment.

There are nice features to this book, including an interesting consideration of policy ethics, with a problem about whom one might wish to save from death, while allowing others to die.

A fine textbook. . . .
Profile Image for Steven Peterson.
Author 19 books329 followers
May 17, 2011
This book has gone through many editions; this is one of the earlier versions. A pretty standard text in public policy. Not the most felicitously written volume. But it does cover the waterfron pretty well. I used this as a textbook before and it worked fairly well. Not the best, but better than other volumes that I have used. The book examines several issues--(1) What is public policy?; (2) How is public policy made?; (3) What are the outlines of basic policy issues (e.g., tax policy, educational policy, energy and the environment)?; (4) What are basic tools of policy analysis?

Overall, a good solid volume.

83 reviews
November 12, 2014
Well written, for the most part. The theoretical portion is comprehensive while also digestible. The issue-based, practical sections would also earn approval except for ideology-creep and, on more than one occasion, vague generalizations treated as truth. It's somewhat unfair to hold this book to platinum standard because it attempts to do the impossible: capture all of American public policy in a (relatively) short book. The succinctness is appreciated. But most of the issue section should be approached with a healthy skepticism.
Profile Image for Doug Morrisey.
1 review1 follower
January 6, 2009
Should be a requireds reading, maybe even a full class should be dedicated to it in secondary and higher education. Peters writes a straightforward description of just how policy is developed at the federal level and only slightly indicates his center-left political leanings. A good facilitator could easily balance those leanings to make them a bit more neutral.
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