Description

Book Synopsis

Until recently, policy evaluation has mostly meant assessing whether government programs raise reading levels, decrease teen pregnancy rates, improve air quality levels, lower drunk-driving rates, or achieve any of the other goals that government programs are ostensibly created to do. Whether or not such programs also have consequences with respect to future demands for government action and whether government programs can heighten—or dampen—citizen involvement in civic activities are questions that are typically overlooked.

This book applies such questions to local government. Employing policy feedback theory to a series of local government programs, Elaine B. Sharp shows that these programs do have consequences with respect to citizens’ political participation. Unlike other feedback theory investigations, which tend to focus on federal government programs, Sharp’s looks at a broad range of policy at the local level, including community policing p

Trade Review

"In this probing and innovative study, Elaine B. Sharp explores how local governments, through policies ranging from social welfare to community policing, affect participation by citizens. Her nuanced and sophisticated analysis extends and challenges what scholars know about the impact of policies on the quality of democracy. Sharp’s findings are sobering: government closest-to-home appears, in many ways, to exacerbate political inequality, amplifying the voice of the powerful and stifling that of the less advantaged." —Suzanne Mettler, The Submerged State: How Invisible Government Programs Undermine American Democracy



Table of Contents

Contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction. Government Programs Matter: Political Learning, Policy Feedbacks, and the Policy-Centered Approach

1.The Participatory Impacts of County Governments’ Means-Tested and Universal Social Programs
2.City Government and Neighborhoods: Intentional Empowerment and Reactionary Mobilization
3.Community Policing: A Reform Policy for Police Responsiveness
4.City Government, Economic Development Incentives, and Business Influence
5.The Impact of Development Incentive Policy Reform: A Case Study
6.Policy-Centered Theory and Urban Programs: Community Effects in a Global Context

Appendix A: The Study Cities and their 2000 Populations
Appendix B: Additional Detail on Content Analysis Procedures and Coding Rules

Notes
Bibliography
Index

Does Local Government Matter

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    A Paperback / softback by Elaine B. Sharp

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      Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
      Publication Date: 23/02/2012
      ISBN13: 9780816677184, 978-0816677184
      ISBN10: 0816677182

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Until recently, policy evaluation has mostly meant assessing whether government programs raise reading levels, decrease teen pregnancy rates, improve air quality levels, lower drunk-driving rates, or achieve any of the other goals that government programs are ostensibly created to do. Whether or not such programs also have consequences with respect to future demands for government action and whether government programs can heighten—or dampen—citizen involvement in civic activities are questions that are typically overlooked.

      This book applies such questions to local government. Employing policy feedback theory to a series of local government programs, Elaine B. Sharp shows that these programs do have consequences with respect to citizens’ political participation. Unlike other feedback theory investigations, which tend to focus on federal government programs, Sharp’s looks at a broad range of policy at the local level, including community policing p

      Trade Review

      "In this probing and innovative study, Elaine B. Sharp explores how local governments, through policies ranging from social welfare to community policing, affect participation by citizens. Her nuanced and sophisticated analysis extends and challenges what scholars know about the impact of policies on the quality of democracy. Sharp’s findings are sobering: government closest-to-home appears, in many ways, to exacerbate political inequality, amplifying the voice of the powerful and stifling that of the less advantaged." —Suzanne Mettler, The Submerged State: How Invisible Government Programs Undermine American Democracy



      Table of Contents

      Contents

      Acknowledgments

      Introduction. Government Programs Matter: Political Learning, Policy Feedbacks, and the Policy-Centered Approach

      1.The Participatory Impacts of County Governments’ Means-Tested and Universal Social Programs
      2.City Government and Neighborhoods: Intentional Empowerment and Reactionary Mobilization
      3.Community Policing: A Reform Policy for Police Responsiveness
      4.City Government, Economic Development Incentives, and Business Influence
      5.The Impact of Development Incentive Policy Reform: A Case Study
      6.Policy-Centered Theory and Urban Programs: Community Effects in a Global Context

      Appendix A: The Study Cities and their 2000 Populations
      Appendix B: Additional Detail on Content Analysis Procedures and Coding Rules

      Notes
      Bibliography
      Index

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