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Policy Drift - Shared Powers and the Making of U.S. Law and Policy (Paperback)
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Policy Drift - Shared Powers and the Making of U.S. Law and Policy (Paperback)
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The role of formal and informal institutional forces in changing
three areas of U.S. public policy: privacy rights, civil rights and
climate policy There is no finality to the public policy process.
Although it's often assumed that once a law is enacted it is
implemented faithfully, even policies believed to be stable can
change or drift in unexpected directions. The Fourth Amendment, for
example, guarantees Americans' privacy rights, but the 9/11
terrorist attacks set off one of the worst cases of
government-sponsored espionage. Policy changes instituted by the
National Security Agency led to widespread warrantless
surveillance, a drift in public policy that led to lawsuits
challenging the constitutionality of wiretapping the American
people. Much of the research in recent decades ignores the impact
of large-scale, slow-moving, secular forces in political, social,
and economic environments on public policy. In Policy Drift, Norma
Riccucci sheds light on how institutional forces collectively
contributed to major change in three key areas of U.S. policy
(privacy rights, civil rights, and climate policy) without any new
policy explicitly being written. Formal levers of change-U.S.
Supreme Court decisions; inaction by Congress; Presidential
executive orders-stimulated by social, political or economic
forces, organized permutations which ultimately shaped and defined
contemporary public policy. Invariably, implementations of new
policies are embedded within a political landscape. Political
actors, motivated by social and economic factors, may explicitly
employ strategies to shift the direction of existing public polices
or derail them altogether. Some segments of the population will
benefit from this process, while others will not; thus, "policy
drifts" carry significant consequences for social and economic
change. A comprehensive account of inadvertent changes to privacy
rights, civil rights, and climate policy, Policy Drift demonstrates
how unanticipated levers of change can modify the status quo in
public policy.
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