Recent research has shown that, at the federal level, new or amended programs typically create networks consisting of multiactor structures spanning governments, sectors, and/or agencies. This study examines the implementation structures created through the regulatory process. We find that in a majority of cases the regulatory process adds to the complexity of implementation patterns; previously simple implementation structures often became more complicated and new actors are brought into the process. Rules also serve a key function in clarifying the general language that is often used by Congress. These findings have implications for the study and practice of public administration
We now live in a regulatory world, where the bulk of federal lawmaking takes place at the bureaucrat...
The transition from a former monopolistic towards a more competitive market innewly liberalized netw...
The phenomenon of regulation can best be understood through the concept of the regulatory state. Thi...
Public administration has long considered the administrative agency as the core institution shaping ...
Research on regulation and regulatory processes has traditionally focused on two prominent roles: ru...
Abstract Government overlap creates problems for the public and private sector across several govern...
A paper like this does not lend itself to conclusions. The unifying theme of the paper is a question...
Over the past few decades, there has been uncritical acceptance in many quarters of the notion that ...
The modem process for making administrative policy-the informal, notice-and-comment rulemaking proce...
Regulatory diffusion occurs when an agency adopts a substantially similar rule to that of another ag...
Regulations are a common mechanism used by governments to guide and facilitate the implementation, m...
As the ever-proliferating rules and enforcement agents of the regulatory state have become increasin...
The study of the politics of regulation has followed two distinct paths in recent years. “New instit...
Implementation is at the core of lawmaking in our divided government. A rich literature covers the w...
Within public administration and policy sciences the concept of policy networks nowadays is well acc...
We now live in a regulatory world, where the bulk of federal lawmaking takes place at the bureaucrat...
The transition from a former monopolistic towards a more competitive market innewly liberalized netw...
The phenomenon of regulation can best be understood through the concept of the regulatory state. Thi...
Public administration has long considered the administrative agency as the core institution shaping ...
Research on regulation and regulatory processes has traditionally focused on two prominent roles: ru...
Abstract Government overlap creates problems for the public and private sector across several govern...
A paper like this does not lend itself to conclusions. The unifying theme of the paper is a question...
Over the past few decades, there has been uncritical acceptance in many quarters of the notion that ...
The modem process for making administrative policy-the informal, notice-and-comment rulemaking proce...
Regulatory diffusion occurs when an agency adopts a substantially similar rule to that of another ag...
Regulations are a common mechanism used by governments to guide and facilitate the implementation, m...
As the ever-proliferating rules and enforcement agents of the regulatory state have become increasin...
The study of the politics of regulation has followed two distinct paths in recent years. “New instit...
Implementation is at the core of lawmaking in our divided government. A rich literature covers the w...
Within public administration and policy sciences the concept of policy networks nowadays is well acc...
We now live in a regulatory world, where the bulk of federal lawmaking takes place at the bureaucrat...
The transition from a former monopolistic towards a more competitive market innewly liberalized netw...
The phenomenon of regulation can best be understood through the concept of the regulatory state. Thi...