Product Description
Re-issued as part of the “Longman Classics in Political Science” series, Kingdon’s renowned work features a new Foreword exploring the book’s historical and enduring contributions. Kingdon’s landmark work on agenda setting and policy formation is now offered in a Longman Classics Edition. This enduring work of original research, drawn from interviews with people in the U.S. federal government over the course of four years, examines the questions of how issues get to… More >>
Agendas, Alternatives, and Public Policies
Tags: agenda setting, Agendas, Alternatives, federal government, landmark work, longman, original research, Policies, policy formation, political science, Public, public policies, science series
#1 by Christian Bravo-lillo on April 14, 2010 - 6:44 pm
This is a classic in public policy research, really worth reading and checking once and over again. Useful also for Master or PhD students of management sciences that are pursuing a gov position, or a job related or even indirectly affected by the challenges of political affairs. It covers one of the topics that frustrated me the most when I had the chance of working in a ministry: how do politicians build their agendas? why it happens that a seemingly irrelevant topic is devoted a huge effort in terms of an agency’s budget and people, and other far more important topics are sometimes tangently touched or even purposefully ignored?
Not too long, very clear, good examples, a really worth reading.
Rating: 5 / 5
#2 by Matthew P. Arsenault on April 14, 2010 - 7:05 pm
Kingdon attempts to explain two steps in the policy process: (a) why some issues are placed on the policy agenda while others are not, and (b) why some policy options – out of many alternatives – are considered and selected while others are not.
Like Cohen, March, and Olsen (1972) Kingdon contends that multiple, independent “streams” flow through the policy process. The streams consist of (1) problems, (2) policy proposals, and (3) political events (pg. 92).
Kingdon contends that the agenda – “subjects that are getting attention” – arise from the problems and politics steams (21). In regards to problems, Kingdon argues that indicators, focusing events, and feedback bring problems to the attention of government officials. Problems to not only gain attention and rise on the governmental agenda, but they can also fade away as conditions change or interest wanes. Political events – changes in public mood, partisan and ideological shifts, administration changes, etc. – also shape the agenda. Under various political conditions, some issues will prove important, while others will not. Furthermore, actors play a role in shaping the agenda. Visible participants – politicians, the media, parties, etc. – are most influential in setting the agenda. They are in positions to bring issues to light.
The policy stream is primarily concerned with generating alternatives, i.e. a set of conceivable government actions. The policy stream is occupied by “hidden participants,” i.e. bureaucrats, academics, congressional staffers, etc. These “hidden participants” generate many alternatives, often before a problem emerges. Within this group of “hidden participants” ideas are bounced around regarding a particular policy area. “Within the policy arena, or “policy primeval soup” alternatives face a certain level of natural selection. They are subject to a number of criteria – feasibility, congruence with values, political receptivity – that shape their acceptability. Those alternatives which meet these criteria – and are actively pursued by policy entrepreneurs – remain possibilities, while those that fail are no longer considered.
The question then becomes, how do problems, alternatives, and politics come together to create public policy. The answer lies in the “coupling” of streams. Although Kingdon contends that the streams generally operate independently, at times, they are joined together at “critical junctures” (20), that is, they are formed together into a single package. In such a “coupling,” a problem is identified, a solution is “coupled” to it, and the political environment is ripe for action, thus creating a “policy window” in which new public policies can emerge.
Rating: 5 / 5
#3 by Cody E. Caffall on April 14, 2010 - 8:30 pm
This book is a great tool to better understand political theory, much of the contents of this book are quite subjective, and although insightfull, i have a hard time argeeing with the author.
Rating: 4 / 5
#4 by William R. Hull on April 14, 2010 - 10:24 pm
This book was used as the underlying basis to understanding the policy process in my graduate level class that I took recently.
Overall I would give this book 5 stars because it is relatively thorough and it encompasses a great deal in a concise model that is easy to understand.
Kingdon discusses that his model is set within three streams, problem, policy and political. Each of these streams have their own unique characteristics that work to help merge with the others. When these streams, ideally all three, a policy window opens where action on policy can occur by a decision-making body such as Congress. With the help of policy entrepreneuers, national mood, policy communities, and much more as agents amongst these streams, each work to produce change on the agenda.
As this class was titled the policy process that I took, it explained how it began but this book does not cover how the process moves once something has been acted upon on the agenda.
If you are looking for understanding more about activity leading up to action, this is a great book. If you are looking to understand the process afterwards, this may not be the right book, but it will help you understand the forces leading up to a process of change.
Definitely, I would recommend this for any political science class at the undergraduate level. I am glad that I was fortunate enough to have it assigned in my grad level policy process class.
Rating: 5 / 5
#5 by Steven A. Peterson on April 15, 2010 - 1:11 am
Agenda setting, in the world of politics, is when a problem becomes identified as an issue that calls for government attention, discussion, and–possibly–decision making. This book is one of the most important works on agenda-setting.
John Kingdon has stated that:
Political events flow along according to their own dynamics and their own rules. Participants perceive swings in national mood, elections bring new administrations to power and new partisan or ideological distributions to Congress, and interest groups of various descriptions press (or fail to press) their demands on government.
The author sees three streams that must come together for an issue to be placed on the agenda–a political stream (just noted above), a policy stream (in which some policy proposal emerges as “best”), and a problem stream (a problem develops that people label as important). If they come together and if the window of opportunity for success is there, then the issue can become an agenda item. If the streams do not come together, agenda placement is unsuccessful–as with President Clinton’s health care plan. That plan had two of three requirements in place. One, the political stream was supportive. A new President had been elected with his party having a majority in both houses of Congress; furthermore, Clinton outlined as a campaign issue support for a more ambitious health care program for Americans. The confluence of these two factors produced something like a “mandate” for change. Two, the problem stream saw health care bubbling up toward the top. That is, increasingly, people seemed to define health care as a serious problem about which something had to be done.
Nonetheless, no major initiative emerged to be fully considered. Clinton’s plan was very nearly DOA (dead on arrival) once serious discussion began. Why? No single policy proposal garnered enough support. Democrats supported several different plans–such as a single payer system (in which government becomes the insurer), “pay or play” (in which businesses would largely fund health care insurance), and the Clinton plan itself (which focused on managed care). Thus, the policy stream never did “come together” around any single proposal. As a result, the initiative died and no substantial changes were forthcoming in the health care system.
What emerges in each stream is, to a large extent, “contingent,” depending upon many factors–including chance. The result is unpredictability.
It may be that this work overemphasizes chance and contingency and underplays the role of human agency (for instance, the role of policy entrepreneurs who labot to get issues placed on the agenda and acted upon). Nonetheless, this is an exemplary work and well worth attending to if one is interested in setting the political agenda.
Rating: 5 / 5