Vast changes in U.S. environmental policy from the New Deal
through the Reagan administration have occurred that shed light on
the nature of the American regulatory state. This book focuses on
the sweeping transformation of regulatory policymaking that took
place around 1970. The rise of social regulation and the advent of
public interest movement during the 1960s and 1970s led to a
significant change in policy outcomes, as the influence of
governmental actors and political activists increased at the
expense of business. By homing in on two specific areas, pesticide
regulation and air pollution control, this study attempts to
describe and explain these changes.
This book is distinguished by its explanation of the
transformation to the new system, its understanding of the way the
new regulatory arrangements affect policy outcomes, and, most
important, its explicit consideration of recent controversies in
empirical political theory. The results provide an assessment of
both the strengths and the weaknesses of the new institutionalism
as a theoretical approach to studying domestic public policy in the
United States. The regime framework developed here is designed to
emphasize the multiplicity of forces behind public policy. This
volume will be of interest to students of the American policy
process, environmental policy and regulation, and theories of the
American state, in academia, government, and the environmental
policy community.
General
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