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The Making and Analysis of Public Policy: A Perspective on the Role of Social Science

Laurence E. Lynn, Jr.

Public policy analysis that is based on transparent, positive methods adds a crucial dimension to the political discourse, which would otherwise be dominated by material interests and unverifiable claims. Supporters of policy analysis, however, have had to contend from the start with intense criticism, originating from both the political world and the research community. Most recently, the most outspoken of these critics have been the post-positivists, who deem policy analysis as anti-democratic and epistemologically unsound. Contrary to these claims, policy analysis in practice exhibits an anti-elite bias that has been crucial for its implementation. In his Harris School working paper titled The Making and Analysis of Public Policy: A Perspective on the Role of Social Science, Laurence E. Lynn, Jr. outlines the debate over public policy analysis, and examines how social science-based studies can influence state action in a manner that is both constructive and consistent with evolving political values.

The Practice of Public Policy Analysis

The literature on policy analysis practice suggests that its emerging ethos was progressive, critical, pragmatic, optimistic, and reformist. Never monolithic in its methods, policy analysis practice has evolved in response to the political and social realities that shape public policy agendas. Policy analysis has been fueled by intuition, argument, and ethical promptings, clearly associated with the world of political action, both normative and prescriptive, often identified with interests otherwise unrepresented. In the words of practitioner Robert Nelson (1989), "In many cases, policy analysts make their greatest contribution, not with highly sophisticated economic analyses, but with simple arguments that challenge practices and ideas that have simply become part of agency tradition, culture, and ideology-even in the face of common sense."

A Clash of Ideologies

Lynn stresses that because policy analysis is an administrative technology with uniquely significant consequences for the direction of the state, controversies over its means and ends are inevitable. Moreover they are bound to be intense. Policy analysis exists in a multi-dimensional Euclidian political space. As such, its deviation from any axis of normative idealization can be argued to constitute evidence of impermissible even corrupt, "bias." Indeed, to make their point, critics attempt to maximize the perceived distance of policy analysis. Thus it is often difficult to believe that supporters of policy analysis practice and their critics inhabit the same reality, much less to understand what they are arguing about.

In recent years, scholars who identify themselves as post-positivists have emerged as the most strident critics of mainstream policy analysis. Their critique has its foundations in postmodernism theory, and various post-positive epistemologies. Lynn argues that the post-positivist animus toward unreconstructed policy analysis has two primary goals. The first is a doctrinaire allegiance with positivist dogma and its goal, the existential removal of policy analysis from the contaminating influence of social and political reality. The objectives of public policy are matters of value, post-positivists claim, not facts based on logic. As a result, conventional policy analysis is "blinded to political reality" (Torgerson 1986, 37). The second goal of post-positive animus is the tendency toward clientelism of mainstream policy analysis. Post-positivists view the partnership between policy analysis and the hierarchical state and its executive agencies as devastating to democracy and to policies; that would otherwise have emerged from unimpeded discussion among informed, autonomous citizens.

The controversy dividing "positivists" from "post-positivists" is predominantly ideological. In Lynn's view, the politics of mainstream policy analysis is, unapologetically, strengthening the liberal democratic state by debating and investigating important policy questions. The politics of the post-positivists, however, seems to replace the liberal democratic state with an imagined "show of hands" democracy in which no actor has power over others and in which expertise has no privileged role.

Background

In the 1960s and early 1970s, the policy analysis "movement" erupted into American political life. Opportunistically assembling rudiments of authority, knowledge, technical skill and application that began to accumulate with the emergence of the modern administrative state, a well-positioned group of federal executives succeeded in forging new structural links between research-based knowledge and policy making. These legacies remain controversial, however. The role of social science in democratic governance and the mediating contributions of policy analysts are vigorously contested, raising issues concerning the future of policy analysis training and practice.

The advent of policy as an administrative technology marked a watershed in public administration: both a culmination of trends toward governance by qualified managers initiated in the 19th century, and, in view of the movement's tendency to centralize political power, a stimulus to late 20th century efforts to democratize policy making influence and expertise. However, public policy scholarship, textbooks, curriculums and folklore still tend to idealize executive-oriented policy analysis. Thus a relatively young profession has seemed slow to adapt to the post-Cold War, "third way," communication-based politics that seem to call for changes in policy analysis methods and applications.

Prior to the 20th century, the law governing public administration in the United States was assumed to be indistinguishable from private law. With the emergence of the administrative state, the courts had to decide how to rule on the issues involving the exercise of discretion by administrative officers in a wide range of matters. Further, the courts had to resolve contentious issues involving the separation of powers and the non-delegation doctrine, which pitted legal formalism against reasonable interpretation. The enactment of the Administrative Procedures Act in 1947 was indeed a milestone, however, the high water mark of deference to administrative discretion was reached when the Supreme Court issued its 1984 decision in the case of Chevron USA vs. Natural Resources Defense Council, in which Federal District judges were directed to defer agency decision-making if (a) agency action was in clear conformity with legislative intent and (b) if, in the absence of clear legislative intent, the agency's actions are reasonable.

Methodology

Lynn reviewed and included studies of social scientist, researchers and scholars in the field of policy analysis and public administration. In developing his argument, Lynn placed special attention to several seminal contributors, in particular Marshall Dimock, Edwin S. Quade, John Friedmann, Giandomenico Majone and Robert A. Heineman.

 

Research Summaries are designed to help broaden the dissemination of current policy-relevant research. These Summaries are funded by the Irving B. Harris Graduate School of Public Policy Studies at the University of Chicago.

For more information, contact Jamie Rosman at HarrisSchool@uchicago.edu or (773) 702.2287.