Lecture 9 Flashcards

1
Q

A policy can be defined as ____

A

a deliberate system of principles to guide decisions selected by a government or an institution to achieve rational goals

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2
Q

How are the decisions of policies made? (3)

A

Based on certain basic principles or ideologies
To achieve stated or intended goals
Through the stated actions to achieve these goals

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3
Q

Who does policy analysis? (5)

A
Governments
Opposite parties
Independent organizations
Independent researcher
Independent citizens as stakeholders
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4
Q

Within public administration, policy analysis examines: (5)

A

Identification of the purpose of the policy
What is promised (goals that reflect values)
What is done
What are the consequences
How the powerholders deal with the negative consequences

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5
Q

What are the major models of policy-making / policy analysis? Briefly describe them (7)

A

Comprehensive approach
Uses social indicators to compare countries and examine their policy effects

Rational model
This model tries to understand all the alternatives, take into account all their consequences, and select the best.

Incremental approaches
new policies are only slightly different from old policies.

Mixed scanning model
-Bridge the gap between the rational and incremental models.

Values competition model (rein)
-That social and public policies are a choice between competing values

Social justice model (gil)
Recognizes that social policies benefits some and not others.
Focuses on transforming the values/structures/dynamics of a society’s particular way of life

The garbage can model
the chaotic reality of organizational decision making in an organized anarchy
Takes a crisis to happen for any real change to come about
Describe as “irrational behaviour.”
Example is government reacting to covid

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6
Q

The following statement is true of which policy-making model? : Countries are compared to each other based on poverty, the social equality of women, quality and availability of education, spending on health care as a percentage of GNP, criminal rates and correctional services and child welfare.

A

A: comprehensive approach

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7
Q

Which social policy model uses analyses of social indicators to provide a comprehensive understanding of the impacts of various national social policies?

A

Comprehensive approach

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8
Q

Why is the comprehensive approach called the comprehensive approach?

A

Because it begins with global objectives based on social values and then translates these values into comprehensive public policies, social institutions, social programs and social services

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9
Q

What are the drawbacks of the comprehensive approach? (2)

A

Different countries have different social contexts (different combination of demographic, historical, social, economic and political contexts and conditions.
Applying this approach does not guarantee the same outcomes for a different country (Switzerland compared to more diverse country)

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10
Q

What idea is the rational model based on?

A

Bounded rationality

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11
Q

What does bounded rationality assume?

A

When people make decisions, their rationality is limited by the available information, the tractability of the decision program, the cognitive limitations of their minds and the time available to make the decision.

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12
Q

What is the sequence of tasks for the rational model? (5)

A

Identify and clarify a social problem
Identify and rank goals with respect to the problem
Develop strategies that can remedy the problems or accomplish goals
Carefully examine all possible outcomes
Decide on which policy best achieves governmental / organizational goals

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13
Q

What are the limitations of the rational / comprehensive models?

A

In practice, the conditions needed to function are unlikely to be met

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14
Q

In order to function well, decision making with rational-comprehensive approach must satisfy two conditions to permit accurate predictions of the consequences associated with the available alternatives:

A

Agreement on objectives and

Sufficient knowledge base

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15
Q

Why does the rational model fail, as suggested by Lindblom (creator of the incremental approach)?

A

Because it is unreasonable to assume one can account for everything, which men simply do not possess, and therefore incomplete at the design level

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16
Q

What is the incremental model ?

A

Views policy making as “muddling through” by making incremental adjustments to already existing policies
Builds on policy from the current landscape, branching out step-by-step and by small degrees

17
Q

Lindblom refers to the rational comprehensive approach as the _____ and the incremental approach as the _______

A

“root method” and “branch method.”

18
Q

In the last 60s years, decision making and policy analysis have moved from ______ to ________.

A

“rational comprehension approach” “incrementalistic approach”.

19
Q

Contemporary political theories recognize more of a:

A

Pluralist political framework

20
Q

Benefits of the incremental approach? (3)

A

Most likely to be understood and accepted
Steps can be made quickly because they are only incremental
By proceeding through a succession of incremental changes, serious lasting mistakes can be avoided.

21
Q

Weakness of incremental approach? (5)

A

Limitations of analysis to a few somewhat familiar policy alternatives
It is a sequence of trails, errors and revised trials
It explores only some, not all, of the important possible sequence of a considered alternative
Fragmentation of analytical work to many partisan participants in policy making, each attending to their piece of the overall problem domain.
Preoccupied with resolving local or immediate issues stemming from social policy and do not pay attention to the causes of the problem in the first place

22
Q

What does the Mixed-scanning policy model try to do?

A

Bridge the gap between the rational and incremental models.

23
Q

Mixed scanning model suggests that:

A

Substantive political and social issues need to be addressed by rational decision making: after that, adjustments need to be made to the policy to reflect unforeseen social realities and unintended consequences.

24
Q

What are the limitations of the mixed scanning model?

A

Assumed that once a problem is identified, something will be done about it
Ignores power and how it’s distributed
Does not assign social workers responsibility to bring about change
Does not address the fact that social workers work in agencies that are given their mandates by those holding political power

25
Q

What does the Values competition model (rein’s) theorize?

A

That social and public policies are a choice between competing values

26
Q

Regarding the values competition model (rein’s), what are the input and the output?

A

The input is the competing values and the output is the social policy outcome

27
Q

(rein’s model): The consideration of various consequence (outcomes) is dependent on the values of those_____

A

Assessing policy.

28
Q

Social policy suffers from detached ideology when:

A

The debate about values is limited to ideology rather than the real world and the needs of real people. In this circumstance, policy choices are made according to values without regard to the outcomes and consequence to others

29
Q

The model refers to the irrational behaviours in extreme cases of aggregate uncertainty in decision making environments.
Disconnects problems, solutions and decision makers from each other. Decisions do not follow a rational order from problem to solution, but are outcomes of several relatively independent streams of events within the organization. Instead, the decision makers in organization go through the “garbage can” and look for a suitable “solution.”

A

What is the garbage can model?

30
Q

The garbage can model describes three types of policy processes:

A

Problems
Solutions
Politics

31
Q

Within the garbage can model, resolving a crisis depends on :

A

How the public views the problem
What the current political agenda is
Who the participants are

32
Q

True or False: Garbage can model describes what should be rather than what is more likely the case in reality.

A

A: False, it is an irrational model of social policy decision making and the one largely employed at a government and organizational level

33
Q

How to minimize “detached ideology”?

A

Increase the involvement of stakeholders / consultation from the source / diversity
Individual level: clients - better informed
Organizational level: more stakeholders
Evidence to support of outcomes
Evaluation to take it accountable - what is standard? What is criteria to achieve ?

34
Q

There are 4 main types of pressure groups that can influence policy in Canada:

A
Business groups (eg. Business council on National Issues)
Labour groups (eg. The Canadian Labour Congress)
Professional groups (eg. CASW)
Advocacy groups