Book Summary of Confronting Values in Policy Analysis: The Politics of Criteria by Frank Fischer and John Forester, eds.
Citation:
Confronting Values in Policy Analysis: The Politics of Criteria, Frank Fischer and John Forester, (eds), ( California: Sage Publications, 1987), 284pp.
This Book Summary written by: T.A. O'Lonergan, Conflict Research Consortium
Confronting Values in Policy Analysis: The Politics of Criteria is
required reading for PSCI 5086-7086 as taught by Professor Charles Lester and
ARSC 5010/7010 as taught by Dr. Guy Burgess and Professor Lester. The work will
be of interest to those who wish to understand why policy is not value
neutral. The book is divided into five sections, each comprised of essays
by different authors concerned with an overarching topic. The first section
concerns the principles and practices which underlie public
policy. The first essay addresses the effects of political philosophy
and practical reason on policy analysis. The second essay questions
whether policy analysis can be ethical.
The second section of the book addresses the technocratic bias
inherent in the utilization of experts in particular areas of concern for policy-makers.
In an examination of policy science and the administrative state, John
Byrne offers an essay titled "The political economy of cost-benefit
analysis". In the second essay in this section, Fischer presents a
critique of the Neo-conservative thesis. Section three focuses upon
normative theory and methodology and begins with an
examination of interpretation and the practice of policy analysis. Forester
discusses normative practices in planning and policy analysis.
The final essay in this section offers a methodological critique of policy
science and rational choice theory.
Section four addresses professional responsibility. Ethics
and the policy analyst is the topic of the first essay. Leonard A. Cole
discusses the ethical problems inherent in the Army's biological
warfare tests. The final section examines three policy cases. The first
case addresses the politics of criteria, using as an example the planning
for the redevelopment of Times Square. The middle essay discusses the
symbolic side of policy analysis, using as illustration the
interpretation of policy change in a health department. The final essay
addresses economic theory in practice. The example used here is the
White House oversight of OSHA health standards.
Confronting Values in Policy Analysis: The Politics of Criteria is
an examination of the values which underlie and drive policy analysis,
explicitly or implicitly. The majority of the authors are political
scientists, yet the perspectives offered in this work are broader than that
association would suggest.
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