the policy paradox: interpreting goals through the market and polis pa 306 farley

21
The Policy Paradox: Interpreting Goals Through the Market and Polis PA 306 Farley

Upload: badrani

Post on 08-Feb-2016

42 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

DESCRIPTION

The Policy Paradox: Interpreting Goals Through the Market and Polis PA 306 Farley. Reasons for Book. 1. Rationality is narrow conception of how humans behave. Paradox and ambiguity are constant. Politics helps us view things from multiple perspectives. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: The Policy Paradox: Interpreting Goals Through the Market and Polis PA 306 Farley

The Policy Paradox: Interpreting Goals Through

the Market and PolisPA 306Farley

Page 2: The Policy Paradox: Interpreting Goals Through the Market and Polis PA 306 Farley

Reasons for Book 1. Rationality is narrow conception of how humans behave.

Paradox and ambiguity are constant. Politics helps us view things from multiple perspectives.

2. Economics is dominant in policy analysis, but very limited. People are individuals, but rather social creatures.

3. No satisfactory models for how policy gets made. Unplanned outcome of everyone acting in self interest? Assembly line?

4. Conventional models ‘worship’ objectivity and determinate rules. We need a model in which “analytical concepts, problem

statements, and policy instruments” are political claims themselves.

Page 3: The Policy Paradox: Interpreting Goals Through the Market and Polis PA 306 Farley

Rationality project depends on three pillars: model of reasoning

rational decision making vs. role for emotions, importance of metaphor, how we see things vs. what they are.

Model of society homogenous globules of desire in a market

setting, vs. interdependent society, cooperation as well as competition?

Oxytocin and dopamine. Model of policy making:

production model or struggle over ideas?

Page 4: The Policy Paradox: Interpreting Goals Through the Market and Polis PA 306 Farley

Political claims vs. truth claims

Are there such things as universal truths?

Page 5: The Policy Paradox: Interpreting Goals Through the Market and Polis PA 306 Farley

What is the public interest? Counterpart to private interest in the

market Individual interests held in common Things you want for community that

might not be in individual interest Goals on which there is consensus. Things that are good for community as

community.

Page 6: The Policy Paradox: Interpreting Goals Through the Market and Polis PA 306 Farley

Concept of Society The Market

The PolisAs “the commons”As “civil society”

See figure on page 33

Page 7: The Policy Paradox: Interpreting Goals Through the Market and Polis PA 306 Farley

How are Goals Determined? Influence

Who influences who?

When does influence turn into coercion?

Page 8: The Policy Paradox: Interpreting Goals Through the Market and Polis PA 306 Farley

Cooperation“Politics involves seeking allies and organizing cooperation in order to compete with opponents.” Stone P.24

“Cooperation is often a more effective form of subordination than coercion. Authority that depends solely on coercion cannot extend very far…” Stone p.25

Page 9: The Policy Paradox: Interpreting Goals Through the Market and Polis PA 306 Farley

Information:

“Spin”: “Because politics is driven by how people interpret information, much political activity is an effort to control interpretations…” Stone p.28

Page 10: The Policy Paradox: Interpreting Goals Through the Market and Polis PA 306 Farley

Passion

“The more often an order is issued and obeyed, the stronger the presumption of compliance.” Stone P.31

The affective dimensions of decision-making…

Page 11: The Policy Paradox: Interpreting Goals Through the Market and Polis PA 306 Farley

Power Is a phenomena of communities. “Its purpose is always to subordinate

individual self-interest to other interests—sometimes to other individuals or group interests, sometimes to the public interest. It operates through influence, cooperation, and loyalty. It is based also on strategic control of information. And finally, it is a resource that obeys the laws of passion rather than the laws of matter.” Stone P.32

Page 12: The Policy Paradox: Interpreting Goals Through the Market and Polis PA 306 Farley

Groups are important:

People belong to institutions and organizations.

Policy making is not only about solving public problems, but about how groups are formed, split, and re-formed to achieve public purposes.

Page 13: The Policy Paradox: Interpreting Goals Through the Market and Polis PA 306 Farley

“Public Interest” Informed by Market Perspectives… In market terms, public interest is

understood as: “the net result of all individuals pursuing their self-interest… In a market, in short, the empty box of public interest is filled as an afterthought with the side effects of other activities…. In the polis, by contrast, people fill the box intentionally, with forethought, planning, and conscious effort.”

Stone P.22

Page 14: The Policy Paradox: Interpreting Goals Through the Market and Polis PA 306 Farley

“Shared meanings motivate people to action and meld individual striving into collective action. Ideas are at the center of all political conflict. Policy making, in turn, is a constant struggle over the criteria for classification, the boundaries of categories, and the definition of ideals that guide the way people behave.” Stone P.11

Page 15: The Policy Paradox: Interpreting Goals Through the Market and Polis PA 306 Farley

“Policy is a rational attempt to attain objectives.”

Page 16: The Policy Paradox: Interpreting Goals Through the Market and Polis PA 306 Farley

Goals… “are often invoked as justifications for a

policy, for a government action, or for the government’s not taking action. They are also used as criteria for evaluating public programs; In this way, they functions as standards against which programs are assessed. They are often called values, suggesting a more complex array of considerations rather than a definitive endpoint.” Stone P.37

Page 17: The Policy Paradox: Interpreting Goals Through the Market and Polis PA 306 Farley

Equality: “Same size share for everybody” Can redefine what is being shared

The cake or the meal? What counts as income for medicare? For financial aid?

Can redefine who is sharing Blocks (e.g. men, women; citizens, non-citizens; minority,

non-minority) Ranks (lecturers, VPs; seniority) Are we rewarding the appropriate things?

Process vs. outcome Equal probabilities, equal votes, equal opportunity Are markets fair?

Page 18: The Policy Paradox: Interpreting Goals Through the Market and Polis PA 306 Farley

Efficiency What is efficiency? Maximizing value from given

resources? Who determines value? What happens when we have multiple

objectives? Is it an end in itself? Are there trade offs with equity?

Page 19: The Policy Paradox: Interpreting Goals Through the Market and Polis PA 306 Farley

Security “Minimum requirements for

biological survival.” What are human needs? Are needs satiable? Do we consider relative as well as

absolute needs? Individual needs, or relational

needs?

Page 20: The Policy Paradox: Interpreting Goals Through the Market and Polis PA 306 Farley

Liberty “People should be free to do what

they want unless their activity harms other people.”

When should liberty be constrained? Harms to individuals Harms to community

Page 21: The Policy Paradox: Interpreting Goals Through the Market and Polis PA 306 Farley

These conceptions can be understood as overlapping and competing with each other…

One’s assumptions about these goals drive the manner in which policy issues are perceived.