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1
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- The location of power
- A. State and
Local governments are important
- 1. 87,500 local governments
- 2. Employ most government
workers
- B. Analyzing patterns of power
- 1. The operations and problems of
state and local government can be understood by calling attention to the
core problems of democratic governance:
citizen participation, liberty, constitutional checks and
balances, representation, and responsible leadership
- 2. The question, who governs?,
throws light on all the problems of state and local government
- 3. Relying on various research
methods, social scientists have studied patterns of power in communities
and have come up with varied findings
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2
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- C. Rule by a few or rule by the many?
- 1. Social stratification
studies
- 2. Community studies
- 3. Studies of who rules, and
the procedures and rules of the game that operate to prevent some issues
from arising
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3
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- The stakes in the political struggle
- A. The maze of interests
- 1. Group interests can be
concentrated in states and localities, whereas their strength tends to
be
- diluted in the national
government
- 2. Special interest groups
concerned with public policy
- 3. Many businesses supplement
their representation through public relations specialists and
political consultants
- B. Lobbyists at the statehouse
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- B. Lobbyists at the statehouse
- 1. There is a widespread
impression that lobbyists have freer rein in state legislatures than
they do in the U.S. Congress and that bribers by lobbyists are cruder
and more obvious in state legislatures
- 2. Several legislatures have
enacted comprehensive financial disclosure laws, and today most
state governments
are more open, professional, and accountable than in the past
- 3. Lobbyists at the state level
appear to be prone to try to persuade the opposition or the undecided in
the legislature
- 4. In most states there is open
competition among organizations, so that no single group or coalition of
groups stands out
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5
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- A. Local government participation
- 1. Citizens generally take
less interest in, vote less often, and are less informed about their
local
governments than they are about the national government
- 2. Cities do not, as a rule,
promote redistributive policies – programs to shift wealth or benefits
- from one segment of the population to another
- 3. Neighborhood groups
sometimes become involved in protecting their areas and petitioning
for improvements
- 4. Groups and individuals
active in local affairs
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- 1. Some local
newspapers have a cozy relationship with elected local officials,
affecting what is written and not written
- 2. Local officials and
citizens are more dependent on the local press than are state and
national officials
- 3. The relationship between
local officials and the local media is often one in which the media are
important players
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- 1. Many important political and economic transactions in a community are
ignored by both the press and the citizenry
- 2. The major
reason for grassroots apathy is that the average person is just not very
interested in local politics
- 3. When certain
issues become intense, people become politically active
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8
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- 1. Examples of local innovation: energy conservation, environmental
cleanup, recycling.
- 2. Problem-solving
and opportunity-enhancing community efforts create partnerships among
local community people with outsiders
- 3. Neighborhood
organizations and spirited civic renewal are critical to the vitality of
local government
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9
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- A. Central issues in the states and local communities
- 1. People want
more services
- 2. Racism still
exists in many communities
- 3. Drugs, gangs,
and drug-related crime impose tough policy challenges
- 4. Poverty in the
inner cities persists
- 5. We need to
guarantee the best possible education for all our young people
- 6. Environmental
regulation, land use and recycling are a major challenge
- 7. Providing
quality health care at a low cost is an increasing difficult problem
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