TY - BOOK ID - 77885749 TI - Federalism, bureaucracy and public policy PY - 1980 SN - 1282850555 9786612850554 0773560769 9780773560765 0773503609 9780773503601 0773503625 9780773503625 PB - [Toronto, Ont.] Institute of Public Administration of Canada DB - UniCat KW - Federal-provincial relations KW - Bureaucracy KW - Highway law KW - Law, Highway KW - Road law KW - Roads KW - Traffic safety KW - Transportation KW - Servitudes KW - Interorganizational relations KW - Political science KW - Public administration KW - Organizational sociology KW - Dominion-provincial relations KW - Federal-provincial controversies KW - Federal-provincial disputes KW - Provincial-federal relations KW - Federal-provincial relations (Canada) KW - Constitutional law KW - Provincial governments KW - Federal government KW - Law and legislation KW - Canada KW - New Brunswick KW - Economic policy. KW - Nouveau-Brunswick KW - Transportation, Automotive UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:77885749 AB - In this book Richard J. Schultz analyses the political process which resulted in a major section of the 1967 National Transportation Act-Part III, which deals with highway transport regulation-never being implemented. In effect, he presents us with a case study of an act that has not become law. In his analysis Professor Schultz employs two models to explain the fate of Part III: the first is the "unitary actor" model, common to the study of Canadian intergovernmental relations; the second is the far less commonly used "bureaucratic politics" model. He finds the first model leaves unanswered too many critical questions, while the second, with its emphasis on the forces that give rise to internal conflict and competition and the consequent colouring this can give to negotiations between governments, offers a more comprehensive explanation of the stalemate that resulted in the shelving of Part III. Using the analysis of the particular case study, the book discusses the broader issues of the underlying dynamics of both intergovernmental and intragovernmental relations in Canada. The study challenges some of the common assumptions about the nature of the policy process within a parliamentary system, and suggests in particular that central agencies may not exercise the degree of control frequently ascribed to them and, more significantly, that power and influence are much more widely dispersed and diffused within our parliamentary system than is generally acknowledged. ER -