Private Interests, Public Policy, and American Agriculture
William P. Browne
xviii, 294 pages, 6 x 9
Studies in Government and Public Policy
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-0335-0, $15.95
Agriculture is at a critical juncture.
The Food Security Act of 1985, which was intended to reduce surpluses
by making American farm products more competitive in world markets,
has not yet succeeded. Food imports have outstripped food exports.
Huge grain surpluses continue to pile up. Because many farmers
and economists fault federal agricultural policies for the current
predicament, this book examines how recent policies, like the
1985 law, have been made and focuses on the key role that private
interests play in the policy process. Not only does Browne give
us the first comprehensive study of all of the organized interests
at work in agricultural policymaking, but he also makes an important
contribution to understanding the interaction of organized interests
in the American political process. His book should appeal to
a wide audience composed of those interested in agriculture,
policy process, and interest group behavior.
In the early 1980s, 128 separate organizations employed Washington-based
lobbyists who regularly worked to influence agricultural policies.
Many other organizations periodically lobbied in agriculture.
The general farm organizations have been joined by commodity
organizations, trade associations, corporate spokesmen, farm
activists, industry lobbyists, consumer groups, environmentalists,
and advocates of a variety of food-related programs. Long gone
are the days when the farm bloc preordained policy outcomes and
when students of American politics looked upon agriculture as
a classic example of the "iron triangle" or self-governing
subsystem of interest groups, bureaucrats, and legislators. Now
the policymaking process is fragmented by the clamor from competing
organized interest groups, and the policy makers responded by
fashioning piecemeal policy with no seeming thought to unity
of purpose. In an attempt to throw light on what actually happens
in Washington, Browne explains what groups and interests are
active in agricultural policymaking, what strategy and tactics
they employ, and why some have more influence than others. One
of Browne's conclusions is that a surprising number of agricultural
issues are uninfluenced by the interest groups because they ignore
them.
For nearly a decade William P. Browne has studied the major
farm organizations, congressional hearings and records related
to agricultural issues, and the American Agricultural Movement.
But perhaps his richest source of information has been extensive
interviews with lobbyists, executives, and grassroots activists
during and just after the 1985 farm bill debates. In the course
of his research, Browne sought to learn how interest groups behave
in deciding their policy priorities and how this behavior actually
relates to influence over the desired policy outcomes.
"This is the most comprehensive treatment of the dynamics
of modern agricultural interest behavior ever produced. . . .
Its dissection of the process out of which the 1985 omnibus farm
legislation emerged is surgical in its precision and clarity."--James
T. Bonnen, past president, American Agricultural Economics
Association
"Browne has revealed a new wave of interest representation,
starkly new in its participants, milieu, goals, and techniques.
it becomes all the more fascinating in a historical context,
which Browne provides. Once again agricultural politics has given
us remarkable insights into the American system."--Don
F. Hadwiger, author of The Politics of Agricultural Research
"This is the most sophisticated treatment we have ever
had of the interest politics of agricultural policy. Browne does
a splendid job of sorting out the different types of interested
parties, identifying their roots, and showing the constraints
under which they operate. He makes a persuasive case that no
one group or combination of groups is likely to dominate farm
policy, that coalitions among farm interests tend to be short-lived,
and that the 'iron triangles' so often cited in political science
literature have been vulnerable to many other influences. This
work will serve as a model for future investigators, not only
of agricultural policy and politics, but in other policy areas
as well."--Robert H. Salisbury, author of Citizen
Participation in the Public Schools
WILLIAM P. BROWNE, professor of political science at
Central Michigan University, is the author of Cultivating
Congress: Constituents, Issues, and Interests in Agricultural
Policymaking; World Food Policies; and Sacred
Cows and Hot Potatoes: Agrarian Myths in Agricultural Policy.
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