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SAGE Publications

Cover Image: Rulemaking: How Government Agencies Write Law and Make Policy, 3rd Edition
  • Date: 02/08/2003
  • Format: Print Paperback
  • Price: $46.95
  • ISBN: 978-1-56802-780-7
  • Pages: 285

Rulemaking: How Government Agencies Write Law and Make Policy, 3rd Edition
Cornelius M. Kerwin, The American University


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Rulemaking is the single most important function performed by agencies of the government. Cornelius Kerwin shows us why this is the case with the third edition of his important and highly regarded text.

Calls for smarter, cheaper, yet more accountable government increasingly affect the definition and implementation of public policy in the United States. Kerwin argues that while Congress and the president provide the general framework for the government’s mission, rulemaking fills in the myriad details that define the law and delineate how each agency carries out its specific responsibilities. It is no wonder that so much intense political activity surrounds rulemaking. The third edition—comprehensively revised with new research, incorporation of recent scholarship, and fresh analysis of the George W. Bush administration's impact—is an invaluable guide to navigating the ins and outs of this important process. This unique and accessible book contains the most current and accurate information available on a crucial yet under-studied subject.

What's new?

  • Survey research – further examination of public participation, including an update of the interest groups' involvement survey, shedding new light on the tactics used to influence rulemaking

  • Data – up-to-the-minute figures on the volume of rulemaking and related actions

  • Recent developments – alterations of rulemaking procedures in response to actions by Congress, the president, and the courts, as well as treatment of efforts by the Bush White House to direct and manage aspects of the process

  • Expanded treatment – new information on the systems that agencies devote to management of the rules, along with additional insight on "electronic rulemaking"

Table of Contents

Preface

  1. The Substance of Rules and the Reasons for Rulemaking

  2. The Process of Rulemaking

  3. Issues and Contradictions

  4. The Management of Rulemaking

  5. Participation in Rulemaking

  6. Oversight of Rulemaking

  7. Rulemaking: Theories and Reform Proposals

Appendix
Index

Bio(s)
Cornelius M. Kerwin, The American University

Cornelius M. Kerwin is currently the provost of American University and a professor of public adminstration in American University's School of Public Affairs. Dr. Kerwin served as the National Association of Schools of Public Affairs and Administration (NASPAA) for the 1998-1999 term. Additionally, he worked as a consultant for several organizations, including the Environmental Protection Agency, the Department of Agriculture, and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.

Sample Pages