The Political Development of Urban Policy: Understanding the Role of Ideas and Institutions Through Intercurrence

Amy Widestrom
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Abstract

Congress authorizes and funds various urban redevelopment programs, and local actors attempt to use these programs to address urban issues and concerns, yet many policies do not live up to expectations. Urban scholars tend to focus on local political or economic arrangements to explain this phenomenon, while public policy scholars emphasize the role of special interest or bureaucratic influence on policy success/failure. In this paper, I suggest a new framework for examining urban policy: intercurrence. I operationalize this theoretical framework, drawn from the political science subfield of American political development (APD), to examine the ideas and institutional ordering mechanisms manifest in the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA). I argue that policy creation and evolution can best be understood by looking at ideas about and the institutional arrangements embedded within urban policy, specifically the relationship between the public and private sectors, between state, local and federal governments, and between the Executive and Legislative branches.
城市政策的政治发展:通过相互作用理解思想和制度的作用
国会授权并资助各种城市重建项目,地方行动者试图利用这些项目来解决城市问题和关注的问题,但许多政策没有达到预期。城市学者倾向于关注当地的政治或经济安排来解释这一现象,而公共政策学者则强调特殊利益或官僚影响对政策成败的作用。在本文中,我提出了一个审视城市政策的新框架:干预。我将这一理论框架运用于美国政治发展(APD)的政治学分支领域,以检验《社区再投资法案》(CRA)中体现的思想和制度排序机制。我认为,要理解政策的产生和演变,最好的方法是研究城市政策中的理念和制度安排,特别是公共和私营部门之间,州、地方和联邦政府之间,以及行政和立法部门之间的关系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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