Democracy and the Policy Sciences
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Table of Contents

Preface 1. The Democratic Dream The American Body Politic ... And the Study of the Public Sector Democracy and the Policy Sciences Organization 2. Visions of American Democracy Introduction Democracy in America Madisonian Democracy De Tocqueville and American Democracy Visions of Democracy in Twentieth-Century America The Case for a Participatory Democracy In Summary 3. Democratic Foundations of the Policy Sciences Introduction The Utilitarian Tradition Liberal Rationalism A Comparison 4. The Policy Sciences for Democracy Introduction Multidisciplinary Approaches New Policy Research Paradigms Postpositivism Critical Theory In Review 5. The Policy Sciences of Democracy: "Two Roads Diverged..." Introduction An American Democratic Dream The Critical Policy Sciences Participatory Policy Analysis "Two Roads Diverged in a Yellow Wood..." Notes Bibliography Index

About the Author

Peter deLeon is Professor of Public Policy in the Graduate School of Public Affairs at the University of Colorado, Denver. He is the author of Thinking About Political Corruption; Advice and Consent: The Development of the Policy Sciences; and The Altered Strategic Environment: Towards the Year 2000.

Reviews

"I read this book with enthusiasm and enjoyed its review of what's wrong with 'traditional' policy analysis. The author sets out to answer the important question of why the policy analysis process should incorporate more public participation, despite the obvious reasons why such participation might seriously complicate any given policy process. His theoretical framework reexamines the 'great and enduring division in American thought' between the Madisonian (representative) and Tocquevillean (participatory) visions of democracy and then uses this distinction to evaluate the current role of professional elites in the policy process. This creates a rationale for participatory policy analysis and leads to the conclusion that the policy sciences need to reflect greater verisimilitude and empathy." -- Marie Danziger, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University "The book does a good job setting up--using a wide range of sources--the key issues concerning the relation of the policy sciences to democracy. This relationship is a crucial, cutting-edge issue in policy sciences (and the general field of public policy)." -- Dan Durning, Vinson Institute of Government, University of Georgia

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