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Policy Without Politicians: Bureaucratic Influence in Comparative Perspective

Online ISBN:
9780191745157
Print ISBN:
9780199645138
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Book

Policy Without Politicians: Bureaucratic Influence in Comparative Perspective

Edward C. Page
Edward C. Page
Sidney and Beatrice Webb Professor of Public Policy, London School of Economics and Political Science
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Published online:
24 January 2013
Published in print:
20 September 2012
Online ISBN:
9780191745157
Print ISBN:
9780199645138
Publisher:
Oxford University Press

Abstract

Have bureaucrats taken over the decision-making role of politicians? This book offers a direct assessment of the role of bureaucrats in policy-making by analysing how they shape policy in making decrees—laws that generally do not pass through full legislative scrutiny. These are often described as ‘secondary legislation’ and are known by a variety of names (including décrets, arrêtés, administrative regulations, Verordnungen, statutory instruments). Such decrees offer an important vantage point for understanding bureaucratic power not only because they account for a large proportion of policy-making activity within the executive, but also because they are made largely away from the glare of publicity. If bureaucrats have strong policy-making powers and use them in a way that minimizes political involvement in policy-making, we would expect to find these powers especially evident in this ‘everyday’ decision-making. The book is based on research examining fifty-two decrees produced between 2005 and 2008 in six jurisdictions: France, the UK, Germany, Sweden, the United States, and the European Union. The comparative perspective allows one to see how far different patterns of bureaucratic involvement in policy-making are characteristic of particular political systems and how far they are a general feature of modern bureaucracies. The book asks three main questions about how these decrees are produced. When do politicians become involved in making them? What happens when politicians become involved? And what happens when they are not involved? The answers to these questions are provided by examination of primary source material as well as interviews with over 100 officials.

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