Agenda Building as a Comparative Political Process
- 1 March 1976
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in American Political Science Review
- Vol. 70 (1) , 126-138
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1960328
Abstract
Agenda building is the process through which demands of various groups in a population are translated into issues which vie for the attention of decision makers (formal agenda) and/or the public (public agenda). This paper presents three models for the comparative study of agenda building. The outside initiative model describes groups with minimal prior access to decision makers, who must consequently first expand their issues to a public agenda before they can hope to reach the formal agenda. The mobilization model accounts for issues which are placed on the formal agenda by political leaders, who subsequently attempt to expand these issues to the public agenda to obtain the support required for implementation. The inside access model refers to leaders, or to those having close contact with these leaders, who seek to place issues on the formal agenda directly, and for whom expansion to the public agenda is both unnecessary and undesirable.Propositions are stated about intergroup variation in patterns of agenda building within societies; about variations in success rates for different strategies and probabilities of occurrence for the three models in different types of societies; and about characteristics of the agenda-building process which hold in all three models and in any social setting.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Why Planning Fails in NepalAdministrative Science Quarterly, 1972
- Comment: On Issues and Nonissues in the Study of PowerAmerican Political Science Review, 1971
- The Politics of Population Planning in Malaysia and the PhilippinesJournal of Comparative Administration, 1971
- Politics, Development strategy, and Family y Planning Programs in India and PakistanJournal of Comparative Administration, 1971
- Liberia: The Dynamics of ContinuityThe Journal of Modern African Studies, 1971
- British Interest Group Theory Reexamined: The Politics of Comprehensive Education in Three British CitiesComparative Politics, 1971
- Cooptation as a Mechanism of Adaption to Change: The Soviet Political Leadership SystemPolity, 1969
- Violence, law, and the informal polityJournal of Conflict Resolution, 1969
- The Functions of Racial ConflictSocial Forces, 1966
- A Critique of the Elitist Theory of DemocracyAmerican Political Science Review, 1966