联邦民主实验室

H. Wiseman, D. Owen
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引用次数: 3

摘要

促进州政策试验是美国联邦制的一个经常被引用的理由。尽管越来越多的人认识到风险厌恶、搭便车和其他阻碍国家主导实验的因素,但国家实验室的神话仍然主导着这些说法。我们提出了一个框架来反驳这种根深蒂固的假设,并使对政策实验的分析更有成效。本文探讨了一系列实验方法,这些方法在它们所包含的实验严格程度(例如它们对混杂变量的控制程度)以及它们设计和实施的治理水平方面有所不同。我们将这一新的分析框架应用于不同政策领域的案例研究,包括农业、自然资源和教育法。这些例子突出了严格的实验设计和主要由联邦机构管理。我们的框架和案例研究颠覆了“各州实验室”的概念,表明实验可以而且经常发生在多个层面,包括联邦层面。在反驳和补充传统实验理论的同时,该条款还揭示了联邦政府参与政策实验的好处,从而揭示了削弱联邦权威以增强实验等联邦主义核心价值观的危险。联邦政府的专业知识和资源——甚至是简单可用的实验平台,如联邦拥有和管理的土地——往往使联邦政府在政策实验领域具有比较优势。这并不是说联邦政府应该始终领导和实施实验,但它提醒人们注意,将实验理解为一种多层次努力的重要性,这种努力远远超出了各州的范围。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Federal Laboratories of Democracy
Facilitating state policy experimentation is an oft-cited justification for the U.S. federalism system. Despite growing recognition of risk aversion, free riding, and other disincentives to state-led experimentation, the mythology of state laboratories still dominates these accounts. We propose a framework that counters this entrenched assumption and enables more productive analysis of policy experimentation. The Article explores a continuum of experimental approaches that differ in terms of the degree of experimental rigor that they incorporate — such as the extent to which they control for confounding variables — and the governance levels at which they are designed and implemented. We apply this new analytical framework to case studies from divergent policy areas, including agricultural, natural resources, and education law. These examples highlight rigorous experiments designed and largely administered by federal agencies. Our framework and case studies turn the concept of the “laboratories of the states” on its head, showing that experimentation can and often does occur at multiple levels, including the federal level. In countering and adding nuance to traditional experimentation accounts, the Article also reveals the benefits of federal involvement in policy experiments, and thus the perils of weakening federal authority in an effort to enhance core federalism values like experimentation. Federal expertise and resources — and even the simple availability of experimental platforms, such as federally-owned and managed lands — often give the federal government a comparative advantage in the policy experimentation field. This is not to say that the federal government should consistently lead and implement experiments, but it calls attention to the importance of understanding experimentation as a multi-level endeavor that extends well beyond the states.
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