Cultivating Congress: Constituents, Issues, and Interests in Agricultural Policymaking / Edition 1

Cultivating Congress: Constituents, Issues, and Interests in Agricultural Policymaking / Edition 1

by William P. Browne
ISBN-10:
0700607013
ISBN-13:
9780700607013
Pub. Date:
04/26/1995
Publisher:
University Press of Kansas
ISBN-10:
0700607013
ISBN-13:
9780700607013
Pub. Date:
04/26/1995
Publisher:
University Press of Kansas
Cultivating Congress: Constituents, Issues, and Interests in Agricultural Policymaking / Edition 1

Cultivating Congress: Constituents, Issues, and Interests in Agricultural Policymaking / Edition 1

by William P. Browne

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Overview

Congress in the mid-1990s remains the object of voter discontent. Public outcries against special interests and unresponsive incumbents have amplified an already pervasive skepticism toward Beltway politics. And while Congress continues to conduct its business, William Browne argues that it is no longer business as usual.

Browne opens up the inner sanctums of Congress to reveal how that institution's daily operations-i.e., its policymaking processes-have changed dramatically. He argues that Congress is no longer dominated by party and committee power-brokers, large organized interest groups, or intrusive federal agencies. Instead, he contends, congressional members are driven largely by grassroots issues and constituent interests.

This shift occurred in response to reforms that diluted the congressional seniority system and empowered the rank-and-file to exert greater influence in policymaking. More members now generate more issues much earlier in that process, resulting in a greater diversity of views in previously entrenched policy domains, but also greater disorganization and less predictability.

Those changes are nowhere more apparent than in the ever shifting arena of agricultural policymaking, which, as the single largest contributor to our GNP, remains a central part of American politics. As agriculture has become more fragmented, globalized, and environmentally aware, agricultural policymaking has grown increasingly complex. In the process, a cacophony of constituent policy demands has altered the way congressional members "play the game." Browne reveals exactly how that new game is played.

Based on nearly 450 interviews with members of Congress, their staff, agency administrators, and lobbyists, Browne's study is timed to appear during the 1995 Congressional debates over a major new agriculture bill. His book should become a major resource—for congressional staff, journalists, political scientists, economists, lobbyists, and policy administrators—for understanding those debates.



Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780700607013
Publisher: University Press of Kansas
Publication date: 04/26/1995
Series: Studies in Government and Public Policy
Pages: 320
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)

Table of Contents

List of Figures and Tables

Preface

Acknowledgments

A Guide to Key Terms

Part One: The Politics of a Postreform Era

1. Congress and Policy Networks in a Postreform Era

2. Agriculture as a Policy Domain

3. Members, Issues, and Policy Vehicles

Part Two: The Politics of Places

4. Peak Interests: Farm Issues and Reform Issues

5. District Effects

6. Networking: Who Listens to Whom

Part Three: The Politics of Institutions

7. Groups and Agencies: The Downside of the Triangle

8. The New Committees?

9. Change and Stability in Agricultural Policy

10. Understanding the Dynamics of Congressional Networking

Appendix

Notes

Index

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