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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 6-page paper is a critical review of Deborah Stone's book "Policy Paradox: The Art of Political Decision-Making." In this paper, the Medicare Drug Act is compared to Stone's policy making/political theories.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_MTpolpar.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
In this paper, well examine one of these books, Policy Paradox: The Art of Political Decision Making by Deborah A. Stone. In this paper, well examine some of her arguments
and ideas, and determine how this book approaches the issue of policy formation/implementation. Overall, Stones message is that political science, public
administration, law and policy analysis share a common mission, although they are different disciplines: mainly, the goal here is to separate public policy from the "irrationalities and indignities of politics."
In other words, experts in these disciplines, she notes, are determined to formulate policy based on rational and analytical models. The problem here, she states, is that it cant be
done. Stone is able to point to the idea that policy making isnt necessarily reserved for the government; she points out that
even as small a level as the school yard (or friendships) that policy paradox exists, mainly because of "rationality project," or "calculative rationality." Basically, what this says is that policy,
in theory, is agreeable to everyone, yet as policy moves toward the reality of implementation, challenges (and obstacles) tend to occur. Moving
back to rationality and politics (and the fact Stone believes the two cant be combined), she notes that the theoretical rational decision-making model doesnt do a very good job of
explaining why politicians behave in the ways they do. Instead, Stone puts forth a political reasoning model she explains as "trying to get others to see a situation as one
thing rather than another." By the same token, she attempts to define policy making as criteria for classification, categorizing and more
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