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Bending the Rules : Procedural Politicking in the Bureaucracy

Title
Bending the Rules : Procedural Politicking in the Bureaucracy / Rachel Augustine Potter.
ISBN
9780226621883
Publication
Chicago : University of Chicago Press, [2019]
Copyright Notice Date
©2019
Physical Description
1 online resource (256 p.) : 24 line drawings, 22 tables
Local Notes
Access is available to the Yale community.
Notes
In English.
Access and use
Access restricted by licensing agreement.
Summary
Who determines the fuel standards for our cars? What about whether Plan B, the morning-after pill, is sold at the local pharmacy? Many people assume such important and controversial policy decisions originate in the halls of Congress. But the choreographed actions of Congress and the president account for only a small portion of the laws created in the United States. By some estimates, more than ninety percent of law is created by administrative rules issued by federal agencies like the Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of Health and Human Services, where unelected bureaucrats with particular policy goals and preferences respond to the incentives created by a complex, procedure-bound rulemaking process. With Bending the Rules, Rachel Augustine Potter shows that rulemaking is not the rote administrative activity it is commonly imagined to be but rather an intensely political activity in its own right. Because rulemaking occurs in a separation of powers system, bureaucrats are not free to implement their preferred policies unimpeded: the president, Congress, and the courts can all get involved in the process, often at the bidding of affected interest groups. However, rather than capitulating to demands, bureaucrats routinely employ "procedural politicking," using their deep knowledge of the process to strategically insulate their proposals from political scrutiny and interference. Tracing the rulemaking process from when an agency first begins working on a rule to when it completes that regulatory action, Potter shows how bureaucrats use procedures to resist interference from Congress, the President, and the courts at each stage of the process. This exercise reveals that unelected bureaucrats wield considerable influence over the direction of public policy in the United States.
Variant and related titles
De Gruyter University Press eBook pilot project 2019.
Format
Books / Online
Language
English
Added to Catalog
June 17, 2022
Contents
Frontmatter
Contents
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
1. The Power of Procedure
2. The Nuts and Bolts of Notice- and- Comment
3. Rulemaking as a Strategic Enterprise
4. Writing as a Tool
5. Consultation as a Tool
6. Timing as a Tool
7. The Case of Menu Labeling
8. Procedural Politicking in Perspective
Data Appendix
References
Index
Citation

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