Glossary
- Accidental Causes
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A type of causal story in which no one is clearly to blame for the outcome of a situation.
- Active Voice
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The subject of the sentence performs the action.
- Administrative Procedure Act
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This law outlines the guidelines for how agencies must go about the work of developing the rules needed to implement legislation or to regulate the aspect of activity over which it has been given authority.
- Advantaged
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A target population that has a high level of political power and a positive social construction. Advantaged groups are likely to receive benefits from public policy and unlikely to experience burdens.
- Affordable Care Act
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Officially titled the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, and more commonly known as "Obamacare," the ACA was enacted in 2010 and changed nearly every aspect of the U.S. healthcare system by expanding eligibility for Medicaid and creating new requirements for insurance companies.
- Agenda Setting
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Bringing the topic to the active attention of policymakers.
- Anecdotal evidence
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Evidence based on personal experience.
- Appellate Courts
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Courts that review the decisions of the lower, district courts. There are 13 appellate courts in the federal system staffed by 170 judges.
- Appropriation
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An appropriation is a document (bill) that gives the government legal authority to spend money on a program or activity. In Minnesota, the state appropriates money in a two year budget cycle called a biennium, which begins on July 1 of odd-numbered years.
- Appropriations Process
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The process by which Congress approves spending money on policies they have authorized.
- Assigned Family Responsibility
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The amount a family is expected to pay for college. Also known as the parent contribution where FAFSA determines what portion of the other 50% (of the cost of attending a college or university) is expected from the student’s family.
- Attorney General
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the primary lawyer for the state, providing legal advice to state agencies and representing the state in court cases.
- Audience
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The intended recipient of your communication.
- Auditor
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This elected position oversees audits of local governments in Minnesota, which means that they review the financial statements prepared by cities and counties to make sure they are accurate and complete.
- Authorizing Bill
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Bills that create, modify, or end a policy.
- Before-and-after study
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Research design that looks at data from before a policy was implemented and compares it to data from after a policy was implemented.
- Bill
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A legislative proposal to create, amend, or remove policy language.
- Bipartisan
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Involves action by members from both major political parties.
- Bounded Rationality
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This perspective on decision making recognizes that decision makers have cognitive limitations related to both attention and emotion.
- Bureaucrats
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People who work for government agencies in the executive branch.
- Cabinet
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Composed of the Vice President and the leaders of the main executive branch departments. It serves an advisory role only and does not have the power or authority to make decisions on its own.
- Causal Stories
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Help interpret the things happening around us, but they also point out who (or what) is to blame for the problem and, through this blame, affect the direction policy should take.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
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Federal agency responsible for promoting health and preventing disease, injury, and premature death.
- Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
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Federal agency that oversees Medicare, Medicaid, and CHIP. CMS also inspects and certifies nursing homes and oversees the health insurance marketplaces.
- Chevron doctrine
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Legal precedent that gives federal agencies the right to interpret ambiguous federal laws through the rulemaking process.
- Chief Justice
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Leader of the U.S. Supreme Court.
- Children’s Health Insurance Program
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A jointly run federal-state program that provides insurance and preventative care for uninsured children.
- Civil Cases
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Civil cases involve disputes between two private individuals or entities.
- Civil Service System
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A merit-based system in which most federal jobs (about 90%) require a person to have expertise in the topic and be qualified to hold the position and it also means that most federal bureaucrats hold the job regardless of the president in power and they are protected from being fired for political reasons.
- Civil Trial
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A legal hearing that involves a dispute between two individuals or organizations. Penalties for a civil trial are financial only and don’t result in a criminal conviction.
- Clean Air Act
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Federal law that created air quality standards and regulates air pollution to protect human health and the environment.
- Clean Water Act
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Federal law that created water quality standards and regulates point source pollution.
- collective action problem
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A situation in which everyone would be better off if they worked together to achieve a goal, but their conflicting interests and personal self interest keep them from doing so.
- Commissioners
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The leaders of 24 cabinet departments of Minnesota's governor’s cabinet. They are selected by the Governor and confirmed by the State Senate.
- Committee
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A formal group of legislators who have jurisdiction over a specific policy topic. Committees study and debate bills, hold hearings to learn more about them, propose modifications to bills, and make a recommendation to the full chamber.
- Committee Report
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A document produced by a committee that explains the purpose of a bill and outlines the reasons the committee supports it (and, when applicable, why the minority opposes it) and how it will change existing law.
- Communitarian
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Political ideology that is liberal on economic issues but conservative on social issues.
- Competitive Regulatory Policies
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Public policies that control who is allowed to enter a market.
- Concurrent Resolution
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Used to change rules that apply to both chambers of Congress or express the sentiments of both chambers.
- Conference Committee
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A committee that includes representatives from both chambers (House and Senate) with the goal of reaching an agreement between the two versions of the bill. Any agreement reached by a conference committee must be ratified by a majority vote in both chambers.
- Confirmation
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Congressional approval of positions within the executive and judicial branch.
- Congressional Record
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A verbatim record of debates and other activity that happens on the floor. In Congress, members can insert text into the Congressional Record, which makes it look like they made a speech on the floor of the chamber even when they didn’t.
- conservationists
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Perspective on environmental policy that promotes the wise use of natural resources by humans.
- Conservatives
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Those who believe the government should play a limited role in the economy but should play an active role in preserving traditional morals and values.
- Constituent Policies
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Public policies that change the rules and structures for how the government operates.
- Contenders
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A target population that has a high level of political power but a negative social construction. Contender groups are likely to receive hidden benefits from public policy and visible, but minimal burdens.
- Cosponsor
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One or more members of the legislature that formally express support for a bill by adding their name to the bill as a cosponsor.
- Cost-benefit evaluation
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Evaluation that focuses on identifying the balance of costs versus benefits associated with a policy to determine whether the benefits outweigh the costs.
- Council on Environmental Quality
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Office within the Executive Office of the President that coordinates presidential efforts related to the environment.
- Counterargument
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A response to a writer’s argument. Good argumentative writing always raises and responds to a strong counterargument.
- Coupling
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The process of two or more streams coming together in the Multiple Streams Framework.
- criminal cases
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Court cases that involve violations of the law. In these cases, the government acts to prosecute the alleged perpetrator.
- Criminal Trial
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These trials involve a person being accused of committing a crime against society as a whole and so the case is brought by the government (via a prosecutor) against the person accused of the crime.
- Decision Agenda
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The list of items that are immediately about to be acted upon by governmental bodies.
- deductible
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A deductible is the amount a person owes for health care services before insurance begins to pay for the coverage. Some plans, for example, pay 100% while others pay 80%. In general, as your premium increases, your deductible decreases, and vice versa.
- Department of Health and Human Services
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The federal agency with primary responsibility over health care in the U.S.
- Dependents
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A target population that has low levels of political power but a positive social construction. Dependent groups are likely to receive some benefits, but less than might be expected given how society views the group.
- Deviants
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A target population that has a low level of political power and a negative social construction. Deviant groups are likely to receive few benefits and lots of burdens by public policy.
- Distributive Policies
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Public policies that spread the costs of a policy out among a large group of people (largely through taxes) but concentrate the benefits among certain recipients.
- District Courts
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The first level of the federal court system, where most cases originate. There are 94 district courts staffed by 673 district court judges. These are the courts that hold trials with evidence presented and witnesses who testify.
- Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization
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2022 U.S. Supreme Court case in which the Court ruled that the Constitution does not confer a right to abortion.
- Domestic
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Focuses on the policies and policy proposals that affect things within the United States rather than in foreign policy or the policies of other nation states.
- DREAM Act
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The DREAM Act is a policy proposal that would protect a group of undocumented immigrants who came to the United States as children. The full name of the proposal is the Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors Act. It was first introduced into Congress in 2001 but it has not yet been enacted into law.
- Editorial Cartoons
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Drawings containing political commentary that relates to current events and/or politics.
- Editorials
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Brief argument-driven essays written by newspaper-employed editorial staff about major issues.
- Effectiveness
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Involves the ability of the policy that is created to meaningfully address the problem it was designed to solve.
- Efficiency
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Getting the most for the least, or achieving an objective for the lowest cost.
- Eligible Institution
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In Minnesota, eligibility to accept money from the Minnesota State Grant program is determined by the Minnesota Office of Higher Education by the following factors: a college or university must be located in Minnesota and offer at least one program that is vocational or academic, leads to a degree or certificate, is at least eight weeks long, and involves at least 12 academic credits (or 300 hours).
- Elite Theory
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This theory argues that public policy outcomes reflect the preferences of political and economic elites and are not reflective of the needs or wants of average citizens. Keep in mind that this is a theory designed to explain observed reality; it is not a normative argument in favor of elite control over government.
- Embedding a Citation
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Including relevant details about the source of the information right in the text itself instead of using a footnote or a parenthetical citation.
- Empirical evidence
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Systematic and objective evaluation of data using quantitative and/or qualitative social scientific research techniques.
- Endangered Species Act
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Passed in 1973 to protect wildlife (animals and plants) at risk of extinction.
- energy policy
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Government action, or inaction, related to production, distribution, and consumption of energy.
- Entitlement Program
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A program in which benefits are awarded to anyone who meets the criteria for the program. If there are more people who meet the criteria for the program, the program will spend more money than originally planned.
- environmental policy
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Government action, or inaction, related to the natural environment.
- Environmental Protection Agency
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Federal agency responsible for protecting human health and the environment.
- environmental racism
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Any policy, practice, or directive that differentially affects or disadvantages (whether intended or unintended) individuals, groups, or communities based on race or color.
- Equity
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Fairness or justice in the distribution of the policy’s costs, benefits, and risks, across population subgroups.
- Executive Departments
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The fifteen major administrative units in government including Agriculture; Commerce; Defense; Education; Energy; Health and Human Services; Homeland Security; Housing and Urban Development; Justice; Labor; State; Interior; Treasury; Transportation; and Veterans Affairs.
- Executive Office of the President
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Created in 1939 to provide the President with expert advisors. It includes the people who work directly in the White House Office as well as those in the Office of Management and Budget, the national Economic Council, the Domestic Policy Council, the National Security Council, and other organizations.
- Executive Order
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A statement issued by a president that creates or modifies laws or the procedures of the federal government independently of congressional action.
- Experimental design
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Research design using a randomly selected experimental group and a control group to assess the impact of a particular variable (policy) on an outcome.
- Fascism
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Rests at the far right end of the ideological continuum, advocating for complete control of public life by government.
- Federal Poverty Level
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A measure of income issued every year by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services that is used to determine eligibility for certain government benefits and programs, including Medicaid, CHIP, and health insurance subsidies.
- Federalism
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A system in which powers are split between two or more levels of government.
- Feedback
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Feedback refers to the way the outcomes or effects of a public policy influences the development of new policies or the revision of existing policies.
- Filibuster
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Occurs when one or more members of the Senate prolong debate on proposed legislation to delay or prevent a decision.
- Final Rule
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Published in the Federal Register as a codification of an agency’s interpretation of how to best implement a policy. A final rule includes a section that describes the problem that the rule is addressing and identifies the specific statute that gives it authority to act.
- Financial Tools
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Any type of policy that involves providing financial benefits in exchange for desired behavior.
- Focusing Events
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Major, unexpected events that draw attention to a problem.
- Food and Drug Administration
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The federal agency that regulates prescription and over-the counter medication, vaccines, medical devices, cosmetics, tobacco products, electronic products that give off radiation, and most food.
- Free Application for Federal Student Aid
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A federal application that is used to award federal loans and grants for postsecondary education.
- free rider problem
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A collective action problem that occurs when people who benefit from a resource (health, for example) either don’t pay or under pay for the resource.
- Genre
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The different types of writing that have different styles and writing conventions associated with the genre.
- Government
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The institutions operating at the national (federal), state, and local level to structure social interactions within a community.
- Government Accountability Office
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Non-partisan, independent agency that conducts policy evaluations on behalf of Congress and executive agencies.
- Government Corporations
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Also known as businesses established by Congress that perform some type of public service that could theoretically be performed by a private business.
- Government learning
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Evaluation that results in learning about how well the policy tools or implementation designs work to improve the delivery of a policy.
- Governor
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the chief executive for the state, responsible for administering laws, appointing the heads of state departments and agencies, appointing judges to fill vacancies, proposing a budget, reviewing bills and either signing or vetoing them and serving as commander-in-chief of the state national guard.
- Green New Deal
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Unsuccessful resolution introduced in 2019 to identify human activity as the dominant cause of climate change and to propose a national mobilization to develop renewable energy, clean up hazardous waste, and overhaul transportation systems.
- Gross Domestic Product
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The GDP is a measure of economic activity that reflects the monetary value of the goods and services produced in a country within a specific year.
- Group Theory
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A theory that argues that the creation of public policy involves a struggle between different groups within society and the resulting policy reflects the interests and preferences of the winning groups.
- Health care policy
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Laws, regulations, and government actions (or inaction) that influence access, delivery, quality, and funding of medical care, including both physical and mental health.
- health disparities
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Avoidable differences in health outcomes that exist between different groups of people.
- health insurance exchanges
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Websites run by the federal government and most states where individuals can view, compare, and purchase individual insurance plans. Also called a marketplace.
- Hearing
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A meeting held by a congressional committee in which they invite people to provide testimony and answer questions from committee members.
- Ideology
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An organized set of beliefs about the proper role of government in a society. Liberal and conservative are two of the main terms associated with ideology.
- Impact evaluation
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Evaluation that focuses on the overall impact of a policy, including both intended and unintended consequences.
- Implicit Biases
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An entire set of biases and behaviors toward a group of people of which we might not even be aware.
- Inadvertent Causes
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A type of causal story in which problems are driven by purposeful human action but with unintended consequences.
- Independent Agencies
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Oversee specific government operations such as elections (the Federal Election Commission) or space exploration (NASA).
- Independent Regulatory Agencies
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Oversee specific economic activities such as the Securities and Exchange Commission or the Consumer Product Safety Commission).
- Indian Health Service
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Federal agency that provides comprehensive health care services to members of federally-recognized tribes.
- Indicators
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Pieces of data that are used to measure the size and scope of the problem.
- individual mandate
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Requirement that all people purchase health insurance either through their employer, the government, or the private market or pay a financial penalty.
- Inflation Reduction Act
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Passed in 2022, this was the largest investment by the U.S. federal government into climate-related policies in U.S. history.
- Initiative
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Allows individual citizens or groups to propose a new law and, in some cases, a constitutional amendment, which is then voted on by citizens in an election.
- Inputs
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Demands for action that come from individuals and groups as well as the support for the system that comes when individuals and groups accept the system of government, for example by paying taxes, obeying laws, and abiding by results of elections.
- Inspector General
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An office that conducts independent audits and investigations of an agency to detect and prevent fraud and abuse.
- Institutional Agenda
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The list of topics to which a particular government institution is paying attention at any given point in time.
- Institutions
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Any of the bodies that are designed to formulate and implement public policy including legislatures, executives, bureaucratic agencies, and courts.
- Intentional Causes
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A type of causal story in which there is a clear person or group responsible for an outcome and that person or group meant for the outcome to happen.
- Interest Groups
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Also known as advocacy groups, are another set of unofficial actors. Interest groups are organizations that engage in political activity.
- Interpretive Rules
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This type of rules do not require notice-and-comment and can be issued without public input. Interpretive rules do not have the force of law but explain the agency’s interpretation of laws or regulations.
- Inverted Pyramid
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This term is related to news articles and involves putting the most important information toward the top of the article and details of lesser importance toward the bottom.
- Iron Triangle
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The closed relationship between a congressional committee or subcommittee, an executive agency, and powerful interest groups in a particular policy domain.
- Issue Brief
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A very short document (1-2 pages) that is used to inform policymakers, and sometimes the public, about a particular issue.
- Issue Framing
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The process of defining an issue as a problem by choosing to highlight or de-emphasize certain aspects of the issue.
- Issue Network
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A loose constellation of participants who are working to influence a particular policy area.
- Joint Resolution
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Similar to a bill. Joint resolutions can be used to appropriate money for a particular purpose, requiring approval by both chambers of Congress and the president. They can also be used to propose amendments to the Constitution.
- Journalists
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The people who write news stories.
- Judge
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Federal judges are nominated by the President and confirmed by a majority vote of the U.S. Senate to serve at the district and appellate levels.
- Judicial Review
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The power of the U.S. Supreme Court to determine whether an action taken by the government is consistent with the U.S. Constitution.
- Juliana v. United States
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2015 lawsuit filed by 21 young people against the United States and executive branch officials that argued that the government was endangering their future by failing to take action against climate change despite knowing about its harmful effects.
- Jurisdiction
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The set of topics that a committee oversees.
- Justice
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Nominated by the President and confirmed by a majority vote of the U.S. Senate to serve at the Supreme Court; the leader of the Supreme Court is called the Chief Justice.
- Kyoto Protocol on Climate Change
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An international treaty adopted in 1997 to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The United States Senate never ratified the treaty.
- Lede
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This term is related to news articles and references in the first sentences in an article that are meant to grab the readers’ attention; answers the big questions of who, what, where, when, why, and how; and details provided in an inverted pyramid style.
- Legislate
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Congress proposes, debates, and passes (or fails to pass) bills that create and fund public policies.
- Lesson-drawing
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Evaluation that results in learning negative and positive lessons from other venues that can be applied to different venues.
- Letters to the Editor
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Letters written by readers of the newspaper in response to news articles or opinion pieces (editorials or op-eds).
- Liberal
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Those who believe the government should play an active role in regulating the economy but should play a limited role in preserving traditional morals and values.
- Libertarian
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Those who believe that the government should play a limited role in regulating the economy and should also play a limited role in preserving traditional morals and values.
- Liberty
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Protection of personal freedom.
- Lieutenant Governor
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serves as an official representative of the governor and assumes the governor’s duties in the event that the governor is absent, incapacitated, or resigns.
- Living and Miscellaneous Expense Allowance
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A standard allowance established by the Minnesota Legislature for room and board, books and supplies, and other miscellaneous expenses related to postsecondary education.
- lobbying
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Action by an individual or organization to persuade elected officials to vote or take action on a particular issue.
- Lobbyists
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The individuals who represent the interests of a business or interest group before government actors.
- Macro Politics
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Major policy changes.
- mandatory spending
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Federal spending that the government is required to fund each year rather than allocating a specific amount of money to the program in each year’s budget.
- Markup Hearing
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A hearing in which a legislative committee or subcommittee will move line by line through the proposal, making changes, called amendments.
- Massachusetts v. Environmental Protection Agency
-
2007 U.S. Supreme Court decision in which the Court ruled that the Environmental Protection Agency must take action to regulate four greenhouse gasses emitted by new vehicles as part of their mandate from the Clean Air Act.
- Master of Public Administration
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A two-year graduate program for people who are interested in implementing and administering public policy in the public sector.
- Master of Public Health
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A MPH leads to careers in government agencies, healthcare organizations, and nonprofits. This is generally a two-year program with classes focused on training students to be public health practitioners, designing, implementing, and evaluating public health programs. There are five general tracks for MPH students: social and behavioral science (community health educators), biostatistics (identifying trends in treatments and programs), environmental health (working to mitigate environmental harms), epidemiology (tracking and controlling disease outbreaks), and health policy administration and management (working within health care delivery organizations). MPH students should take some courses in math, statistics, biology, and the social sciences. It’s also a good idea for potential applicants to gain some experience in community outreach and engagement related to health such as working at a clinic or hospital, interning at a local public health department, or volunteering with a non-profit involved in public health advocacy or direct service. The average salary for MPH graduates varies quite a bit depending on which track a person pursues. MPH graduates from the University of Minnesota earned an average salary of $55,600. Graduates tend to hold job titles like clinical research coordinator, epidemiologist, health educator, or health service administrator.
- Master of Public Policy
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A two-year graduate program for people who are interested in designing and evaluating public policy either in the public or private sector.
- Mechanical Causes
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A type of causal story in which problems are unguided but have indirectly intentional consequences.
- Media
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Plays an important role in the political process. The media includes traditional news outlets like newspapers, radio, and broadcast television as well as newer forms such as cable news, the internet, and social media.
- Medicaid
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A jointly administered federal-state program serving low income adults and children and the disabled. Additionally nearly one-third of nursing home care is covered by Medicaid.
- Medicare
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A federal program providing medical insurance to people ages 65 and older and younger people with certain disabilities.
- Members of Congress
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The 100 elected Senators (two from each state) serving in the U.S. Senate and 435 elected Representatives (based on population) serving in the House of Representatives.
- Memo
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A short message that follows a very specific format. Memos are widely used in workplace environments, particularly in business and government. The purpose of a memo is to communicate information clearly and concisely to a specific audience.
- Mimicking
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The technique of copying a successful strategy from one policy issue in a debate over a different policy issue.
- Minnesota Legislature
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The branch of state government responsible for proposing, debating, and passing legislation. Like the federal system, the Minnesota legislature is bicameral (has two chambers), but there are several other important differences.
- Minnesota Office of Higher Education
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This state agency administers public policies related to postsecondary education.
- Minnesota Pollution Control Agency
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The primary state-level agency in Minnesota overseeing environmental policy.
- Minnesota Private College Council
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The MPCC is an advocacy group that represents eighteen private colleges in Minnesota.
- Multiple Referral
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The process of sending a bill to more than one committee at a time for review.
- Multiple Streams Framework
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The MSF is a theory developed by John Kingdon that seeks to explain why and how issues become things that policymakers pay attention to and act on.
- National Environmental Policy Act
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Passed in 1969 to establish a national environmental policy for the United States and require an environmental impact review for federal actions.
- National Institutes of Health
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Federal agency that conducts and funds biomedical research.
- Negotiated Rulemaking
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A rulemaking process in which the agency invites interested actors, such as interest groups representing affected interests, to shape the initial proposal.
- News Articles
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Articles written by journalists to report information about things that happened in the world.
- non-point source pollution
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Pollution that comes from multiple locations like stormwater runoff.
- Nonpartisan
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People not explicitly affiliated with a political party.
- Normative
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A description or claim about how the world ought to be based on value judgements.
- Office of Management and Budget
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A particularly important office within the executive branch that is responsible for preparing the president’s annual budget proposal and reviewing all proposed bills and agency regulations.
- Official Actors
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Actors that have an authorized role to play in the policymaking process based on the Constitution or statute (law).
- Omnibus Bill
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A process in which legislators bundle up a bunch of bills on the same general topic into one large bill and the Minnesota legislature does it frequently rather than passing each bill separately.
- Outcome evaluation
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Evaluation that focuses on whether the policy has achieved its goals.
- Outputs
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In the political system, outputs are the policies such as laws, court decisions, and bureaucratic regulations.
- Oversight
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Congress’ power to provide checks and balances on other branches of government by holding hearings, calling officials to testify in front of Congress, and issuing written reports about government agencies.
- Oversubscribed
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When you get more of something than you should.
- Paris Climate Agreement
-
International plan negotiated in 2015 to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The U.S. signed on to the agreement in 2015, withdrew from it in 2016, and rejoined it in 2021
- Partisanship
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Support for a particular political party.
- Party Platforms
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A list of a party’s positions on major political issues where they outline their preferred policy outcomes.
- Passive Voice
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The subject of the sentence is acted upon by the verb.
- payroll taxes
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Taxes paid by employees and employers based on wages, tips, and salaries. Payroll taxes for employees are withheld by the employer and paid to the government. Payroll taxes include local, state, and federal income taxes, and Social Security and Medicare taxes.
- Persuasive Writing
-
This type of writing is intended to change someone’s mind about a topic or get them to act (or not act) on a topic.
- Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey
-
1992 U.S. Supreme Court case in which the Court upheld the ruling in Roe v. Wade protecting the right to abortion, but allowed states to enact pre-viability restrictions as long as the restrictions don't create an undue burden on a woman's access to abortion.
- Plea Deal
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An agreement between a person accused of a crime and the prosecutor in which the defendant pleads guilty in exchange for a lighter sentence.
- Pluralism
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A theory that argues that the creation of public policy involves a struggle between different groups within society and the resulting policy reflects the interests and preferences of the winning groups.
- Pocket Veto
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When there are less than ten days left in a current congress but the President does not sign or veto the bill, the bill does not go into effect. This is called a pocket veto because the President did not have to take proactive action to veto the bill but rather just put it in his pocket to die.
- Point source pollution
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Pollution that comes from a single point like a factory.
- Policy Adoption
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The process of formally adopting a government policy.
- Policy analysis
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A forwards-looking process using data to make predictions about the effect and effectiveness of proposed public policies.
- Policy diffusion
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The spread of policy ideas from one government to another.
- Policy Evaluation
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Efforts by government and other policy actors (like academics!) to find out whether the policy was effective in reaching its intended goals.
- Policy Formulation
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The process of designing and passing a government policy.
- Policy Image
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The way a problem is defined and portrayed to the public.
- Policy Implementation
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The process of actually putting the government policies that are passed into action.
- Policy Monopoly
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The small group of the most important actors (both official and unofficial) who control policy making in a given domain.
- Policy outcomes
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The results or consequences of a policy. May be intended or unintended.
- Policy outputs
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The actions a government agency takes or the things that a government agency produces in the process of implementing a policy.
- Policy Stream
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Part of Kingdon’s Multiple Streams Framework in which different policy ideas exist independently of political problems.
- Policy Tools
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The mechanisms that policymakers use to motivate people or institutions to behave in ways that satisfy the goals of public policy.
- Policy-oriented learning
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Evaluation that results in learning about changes that can be made to policy to better achieve desired goals and objectives.
- Policymaking
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The processes of designing, passing, and implementing a government policy.
- Political Feasibility
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Has to do with whether it is realistically possible to adopt a particular policy solution.
- Political learning
-
Evaluation that results in learning about effective strategies for advocating for a particular policy.
- Political Parties
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Organizations of likeminded people who work together to win control of government through elections and that help to structure and organize the policymaking process.
- Political power
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Includes things like access to financial resources, civic participation, access to power, and the ability to organize.
- Political Systems Model
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This theory of policymaking conceives the process as involving inputs and outputs into a political system embedded within an environment.
- Politics Stream
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Part of Kingdon’s Multiple Streams Framework in which aspects of the political environment influence how issues move on or off the agenda.
- Precedent
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Making a judicial decision so that it conforms to decisions reached in prior similar cases.
- premium
-
A premium is the upfront cost paid for a health insurance plan. This is generally paid by individuals, business, or the government in monthly, quarterly, or yearly installments.
- preservationists
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Perspective on environmental policy that promotes the complete protection of nature and wild areas.
- President
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The chief executive within the U.S. federal government. Presidents are responsible for overseeing the implementation of public policy and reviewing (by signing or vetoing) laws passed by Congress.
- Press Releases
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Short documents (usually only 1-2 pages in length) that are written to provide basic information about an event or action that is going to happen or that has already happened. (Also called media releases)
- Problem Definition
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Defining a situation as something that is worthy of attention from the government.
- Problem Stream
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Part of Kindgon’s Multiple Streams Framework in which conditions come to be defined as problems worthy of government attention.
- Process evaluation
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Evaluation that focuses on how well a policy is administered or implemented.
- Protective Regulatory Policies
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Public policies that are designed to protect the public from harm.
- Public comments
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Communication to the government regarding a proposed regulation.
- public health policy
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Laws, regulations, actions, and decisions implemented within a society in order to promote wellness and ensure that specific health goals are met.
- Public Health Service
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Commissioned health care providers operating across multiple federal agencies with the mandate to protect and promote health and safety.
- public option
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A government-run health insurance plan open to anyone.
- Public Policy
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The authoritative statements and actions of the government that reflect what governments choose to do or not to do.
- Punctuated Equilibrium Theory
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This theory seeks to explain why public policy experiences long periods of stability but can also feature sudden and dramatic changes at certain points in time.
- Purpose
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A reason for writing or a goal of communication. Common purposes include informing, summarizing, persuading, encouraging, and entertaining.
- Quasi-experimental design
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Also known as a natural experiment. Research design in which two groups are compared (but not randomly selected) to assess the impact of a particular variable (policy) on an outcome.
- Rational Decision
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A rational decision is one in which the decision maker must 1) have access to and be able to understand and process all of the relevant information related to a decision, 2) be able to identify and rank their values and preferences, and 3) be able to evaluate the information in light of those preferences in order to arrive at the best possible decision.
- reconciliation
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A parliamentary procedure within Congress that allows it to expedite the passage of certain budget legislation in the Senate by overriding the Senate's filibuster rules.
- Recorded Vote
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When a chamber of Congress records the names of people who voted for and against a proposal.
- Redistributive Policies
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Public policies that have concentrated costs and concentrated benefits, but the group that pays the costs is different from the group that gets the benefits.
- Referendum
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A process in some states in which a state legislature passes a law but places it on the ballot for voters to either uphold or repeal.
- Regulation
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A statement issued by a government agency, board, or commission that has the force and effect of a law passed by Congress.
- Regulatory Policies
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Public politics that concentrate the costs among a few people but distribute the benefits widely.
- Representation
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This is the extent to which Congress reflects the voices and viewpoint of the people in the decision making process.
- Representatives
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Serve in the House of Representatives from geographical districts and are elected to two year terms.
- Resolution
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Similar to a bill but used to express ideas, set internal rules for Congress, or propose constitutional amendments.
- Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
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Passed in 1976 to monitor the generation, transportation, storage, and disposal of hazardous waste.
- Rhetorical Approach
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This approach to analyzing written texts asks us to consider the purpose and audience for our writing (and for evaluating things we read!) and reminds us that there are different genres (types of writing) all of which have a different set of conventions and expectations associated with them.
- Roe v. Wade
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1973 U.S. Supreme Court Case in which the Court ruled that the Constitution protected the right to have an abortion. This precedent was overturned by the 2022 decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization.
- Rulemaking
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The process of creating rules and regulations by bureaucratic agencies as they work to implement laws passed by Congress.
- Rules Committee
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A committee in the House of Representatives that establishes the guidelines for debating proposals in the House.
- Safe Drinking Water Act
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Passed in 1974 to set national standards for drinking water quality.
- Scope of Conflict
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This refers to the number of people involved in a particular decision. Those who are currently in a position of power tend to prefer to privatize the conflict, limiting the number of participants in decision making.
- Secretary
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The people who lead each of the departments within the executive departments. They are nominated by the President and confirmed by the Senate, but they serve at the pleasure of the President. All of the federal cabinet-level departments are led by a Secretary with the exception of the Department of Justice, which is led by the Attorney General.
- Secretary of State
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The Secretary of State is the head election official in the state, certifies official state documents like laws, and regulates businesses in Minnesota.
- Security
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Refers to both objectively being safe and also subjectively feeling safe.
- Senators
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Serve in the Senate and are elected to six year terms; one third of the Senate is up for election in even years. (In Minnesota, Senators are elected to four year terms.)
- Separation of Powers
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At each level of government (federal, state, and local), power is further split between different branches of government (legislative, executive, and judicial).
- Service Tools
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Policies that provide direct services, information, or education.
- Signing Statements
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Written documents that are issued when presidents sign new policies into law. Presidents sometimes use these to call out aspects of the law that they disagree with and plan to ignore in the enforcement process.
- Simple Resolution
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Used to express the sentiment of one chamber.
- single-payer health care
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In this type of health care system, the government pays the bills for health expenses of all citizens rather than processing medical payments through insurance companies.
- Social Construction
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The process of giving a problem its meaning and worth.
- Social Construction Theory
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A theory developed by Anne Schneider and Helen Ingram that describes how cultural images and characterizations of groups of people influence public policy decisions.
- social determinants of health
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Non-medical factors that affect health outcomes.
- Social policy learning
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Evaluation that results in learning about how the social construction of a policy or problem affects how people perceive the government action.
- Socialism
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This ideological perspective rests at the far left end of the economic continuum, emphasizing collective ownership of business.
- Softening Up
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Part of Kingdon’s Multiple Streams Framework in which actors become more comfortable with policy proposals. This is especially common when ideas are pretty extreme on either end of the spectrum, but as they continue to bump around among policy actors, the ideas start to seem more mainstream.
- Sponsor
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The Senator or Representative who introduces a bill or resolution.
- State Auditor
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The state auditor oversees audits of local governments in Minnesota, which means that they review the financial statements prepared by cities and counties to make sure they are accurate and complete.
- state police power
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The practice within U.S. government to defer to the states to protect the public health, morals, and safety.
- Stereotypes
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Involves identifying a set of common attributes for an entire group of people and then attributing those attributes to individuals who are part of that group.
- Street Level Bureaucrats
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The government employees who work on the front lines of providing direct services.
- Student Share
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An expectation that a student contributes 50% towards the cost of education of a state university, which is determined by the state-set formula (tuition, fees, and living expenses).
- Subcommittee
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A subsection of a committee that focuses on an even more specific aspect of the policy area. Like committees, subcommittees can hold hearings and propose amendments. Any decisions made by a subcommittee must be approved by the full committee.
- Subsystem Politics
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Policymaking that is impacted by a small and stable group of official and unofficial actors.
- Superfund
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Also known as the Comprehensive Environmental Response and Liability Act. Passed in 1980 to coordinate and fund toxic waste cleanup efforts around the country.
- Surgeon General
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The U.S. Surgeon General oversees the Public Health Service Commissioned Corps and serves as the symbolic doctor for the American people.
- Symbolic Tools
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Policies that urge, but don’t require, compliance.
- Systemic Agenda
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Issues that are viewed by members of the political community as meriting public attention and as falling within the legitimate jurisdiction of existing government authority.
- Target Population
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The group of people whose behavior you wish to change.
- tax exclusion for employer-sponsored health insurance
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Health insurance premiums paid by employers and employees is excluded from federal income and payroll taxes.
- Testimony
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Written or spoken information that is presented to a legislative committee or subcommittee during their discussion of proposed legislation.
- Theory
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Provides an outline of how a process works and calls attention to certain key aspects of the process. It is meant to explain what has happened in the past and to help us make predictions for future policymaking.
- Theory of change
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An explanation of the expected causal chain between the policy and desired outcomes that explains how the policy is supposed to work.
- Think Tanks
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Research institutions that conduct and disseminate research with the goal of influencing public policy. These are often described as universities without students.
- tragedy of the commons
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One type of collective action problem in which people who have access to a common resource act in their own self interest by using the resource, which negatively impacts access to, or the quality of, the resource for others.
- Types of Evidence
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There are multiple forms of evidence used in building arguments including: statistical evidence, research findings, testimony of experts, or even personal experience of writers.
- U.S. Department of Education
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This federal agency administered public policies related to education from pre-K to postsecondary institutions.
- U.S. Supreme Court
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The highest level of court in the federal system, staffed by 9 justices.
- Unanimous Consent
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The Senate requires approval from all members to act, and so it operates under a series of unanimous consent agreements to conduct its business. Unless a Senator objects, the Senate continues with its business. A Senator who strongly objects might consider starting a filibuster.
- Undersubscribed
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When you get less of something than you should.
- Unofficial Actors
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Actors that have an interest in policy outcomes and work hard to influence policy outcomes, but lack the legal standing to actually make a policy decision.
- Vacating the Rule
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A declaration by a judge that an administrative rule is void or unenforceable.
- Venue Shopping
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The process of proactively seeking out a more favorable venue for political action.
- Venues
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Centers of policy making power.
- Veterans Health Administration
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Federal agency that provides comprehensive health care services to military veterans at over 1,300 health care facilities.
- Veto
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An action taken by a President to oppose a bill passed by Congress.
- Voice Vote
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A vote taken in Congress in which members express their support or opposition to the proposal verbally without recording how individual members voted.
- Welfare
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The general belief that society should help individuals and families when they are in dire need.
- West Virginia v. EPA
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2022 U.S. Supreme Court case in which the Court ruled that the Environmental Protection Agency does not have the power to issue regulations limiting emissions across the power sector.
- Wilderness Act
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Passed in 1964 to preserve land for federal protection.
- Window of Opportunity
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Part of Kingdon’s Multiple Streams Framework. A brief block of time when multiple streams converge to allow policy action to occur.