|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
An experimenting society is one in which policy-relevant knowledge
is created. It is then critically assessed and communicated in
real-life or natural settings, with the aim of discovering new
forms of public action to improve the problem-solving capacities of
society. This latest volume of the distinguished Policy Studies
Review Annual series probes, evaluates, and augments the work of
Donald T. Campbell on an experimental societies. A basic assumption
of this volume is that Campbell's perspective supplies a useful way
to address increasingly complex and seemingly unmanageable problems
facing the United States and other postindustrial societies. This
volume is also the fourteenth festschrift to be issued by
Transaction. The focus is on theoretical as well as practical
options for creating an experimenting society. The rationale for
this focus is the belief, increasingly -shared in the social
science and policy-making communities alike, that researchers are
essentially ignorant about how to solve many of the most pressing
larger problems of this epoch. This frank recognition of ignorance
is a prerequisite of genuine scientific and professional curiosity,
without which knowledge gains are next to impossible to achieve,
and a'precondition of an experimenting society. Contributors to
this original volume include: Steve-Fuller, Duncan MacRae, Jr.,
Anthony S. Bryk, Robert A. Beauregard, Rita Mae Kelly, Peter
Gregware, Burkart Holzner, B. Guy Peters, C. West Churchman, and
Ian I. Mitroff. Their multidisciplinary competencies are at once
philosophical, methodological, and substantive. They address such
questions as: What new or bold policies are available in domains
such as education, science, and urban development? In what ways can
theoretical knowledge and practical action be fused so as to
illuminate or alleviate policy problems? What should be done?
Included are excerpts from Campbell's foundational paper "The
Experimenting Society," as well as a recent article entitled
"Methods for the Experimenting Society," which circulated in
unpublished form for many years. An unusual feature of the book is
Campbell's responses to those who have addressed his work with
candor and intelligence. It will be of interest to policy studies
scholars, sociologists, and social scientists.
This Element presents an examination of the origins of the policy
sciences in the School of Pragmatism at the University of Chicago
in the period 1915-38. Harold D. Lasswell, the principal creator of
the policy sciences, based much of his work on the perspectives of
public policy of John Dewey and other pragmatists at Chicago.
Characteristics of the policy sciences include orientations that
are normative, policy-relevant, contextual, and multi-disciplinary.
These orientations originate in pragmatist principles of the unity
of knowledge and action and functionalist explanations of action by
reference to values. These principles are central to the future
development of the policy sciences.
Public Policy Analysis, the most widely cited book on the subject,
provides students with a comprehensive methodology of policy
analysis. It starts from the premise that policy analysis is an
applied social science discipline designed for solving practical
problems facing public and nonprofit organizations. This thoroughly
revised sixth edition contains a number of important updates: Each
chapter includes an all-new "big ideas" case study in policy
analysis to stimulate student interest in timely and important
problems. The dedicated chapter on evidence-based policy and the
role of field experiments has been thoroughly rewritten and
expanded. New sections on important developments in the field have
been added, including using scientific evidence in public
policymaking, systematic reviews, meta-analyses, and "big data."
Data sets to apply analytical techniques are included online as IBM
SPSS 23.0 files and are convertible to Excel, Stata, and R
statistical software programs to suit a variety of course needs and
teaching styles. All-new PowerPoint slides are included to make
instructor preparation easier than ever before. Designed to prepare
students from a variety of academic backgrounds to conduct policy
analysis on their own, without requiring a background in
microeconomics, Public Policy Analysis, Sixth Edition helps
students develop the practical skills needed to communicate
findings through memos, position papers, and other forms of
structured analytical writing. The text engages students by
challenging them to critically analyze the arguments of policy
practitioners as well as political scientists, economists, and
political philosophers.
Public Policy Analysis, the most widely cited book on the subject,
provides students with a comprehensive methodology of policy
analysis. It starts from the premise that policy analysis is an
applied social science discipline designed for solving practical
problems facing public and nonprofit organizations. This thoroughly
revised sixth edition contains a number of important updates: Each
chapter includes an all-new "big ideas" case study in policy
analysis to stimulate student interest in timely and important
problems. The dedicated chapter on evidence-based policy and the
role of field experiments has been thoroughly rewritten and
expanded. New sections on important developments in the field have
been added, including using scientific evidence in public
policymaking, systematic reviews, meta-analyses, and "big data."
Data sets to apply analytical techniques are included online as IBM
SPSS 23.0 files and are convertible to Excel, Stata, and R
statistical software programs to suit a variety of course needs and
teaching styles. All-new PowerPoint slides are included to make
instructor preparation easier than ever before. Designed to prepare
students from a variety of academic backgrounds to conduct policy
analysis on their own, without requiring a background in
microeconomics, Public Policy Analysis, Sixth Edition helps
students develop the practical skills needed to communicate
findings through memos, position papers, and other forms of
structured analytical writing. The text engages students by
challenging them to critically analyze the arguments of policy
practitioners as well as political scientists, economists, and
political philosophers.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
Gloria
Sam Smith
CD
R187
R177
Discovery Miles 1 770
|