Making Policy Public: Participatory Bureaucracy In American Democracy
Cambridge University Press
Edition: First Edition, 9/27/2014
EAN 9781107665972, ISBN10: 1107665973
Paperback, 284 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 1.6 cm
Language: English
This book challenges the conventional wisdom that government bureaucrats inevitably seek secrecy and demonstrates how and when participatory bureaucracy manages the enduring tension between bureaucratic administration and democratic accountability. Looking closely at federal level public participation in pharmaceutical regulation and educational assessments within the context of the vast system of American federal advisory committees, this book demonstrates that participatory bureaucracy supports bureaucratic administration in ways consistent with democratic accountability when it focuses on complex tasks and engages diverse expertise. In these conditions, public participation can help produce better policy outcomes, such as safer prescription drugs. Instead of bureaucracy's opposite or alternative, public participation can work as its complement.
1. Portals of democracy in American bureaucracy
2. Participatory bureaucracy in practice
implementing complex policy
3. The private and bureaucratic roots of public participation
the development of American federal public committees
4. Making educational performance public
reporting on the progress of education
5. Private knowledge for public problems
regulating pharmaceutical information
6. Setting the public agenda
7. Deliberate participation
8. The impact of public advice on bureaucratic administration
9. Participatory bureaucracy in American democracy.