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Morality Policies

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Sex, Drugs, Rock, and Roll: A Theory of Morality Politics. ... sin policies can successfully reframe the debate (away from 'sin'), the politics ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Morality Policies


1
Comunicación y Gerencia
  • Morality Policies

Wilson, Chapter 11    Meier, Kenneth J. 1999.
Sex, Drugs, Rock, and Roll A Theory of Morality
Politics. Policy Studies Journal 27(4)
681-695.    CQ Researcher, Chapter 5 (Stem Cell
Research)
2
What are Morality Policies?
  • Morality policies are characterized as
  • a debate over first principles core values
  • where at least one group involved has portrayed
    the policy issue as one of morality or sin
  • and used moral arguments to support its policy
    position
  • (Meier Mooney Haider-Markel Smith and others)

3
Examples of Morality Policy Issues
  • Abortion
  • Pornography
  • Gay rights/marriage
  • Drugs/Alcohol
  • Death Penalty
  • Gambling
  • Assisted Suicide
  • School Prayer
  • Prostitution

4
Two Types of Morality Policies
  • Sin policies
  • Redistributive Morality Policies
  • Each policy type leads to a distinctive politics
    and policy outcomes

5
Sin Policies
  • Policies addressing behaviors which relatively
    few people are willing to
  • admit to engaging in
  • Defend (policy debate is one-sided)
  • Drug use
  • Pornography
  • Prostitution, strip clubs, etc.
  • Gambling

6
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7
Explaining Legislative Adoptions
  • Assumption 1 The (true) demand for sin is
    characterized by heterogeneous preferences.

8
Explaining Legislative Adoptions
  • Assumption 2 In terms of sin, the correlation
    between public behavior and private behavior is
    less than perfect.

9
Explaining Legislative Adoptions
  • Lessons
  • Elected officials will overestimate the demand
    for policies designed to regulate sin
  • Anti-sin policies are adopted in an environment
    in which there is little reasoned (and
    politically meaningful) debate

10
Explaining Bureaucratic Behavior
11
Explaining Bureaucratic Behavior
  • Implementing agencies (law enforcement) will
    inevitably support stronger enforcement of
    anti-sin policies
  • Perception of consumption of sin (overestimate)
  • Maximization of organizational resources

12
Explaining Policy Outcomes
  • Policies restricting sin are inevitably doomed to
    have limited effectiveness

13
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14
The Transformation from Sin Politics to
Redistributive Politics
  • Sin Politics The behavior being regulated is
    socially constructed as sin
  • No significant political challenge
  • But issues are multidimensional and therefore can
    be framed in multiple ways
  • When opponents of sin policies can successfully
    reframe the debate (away from sin), the
    politics of sin can be transformed into the
    politics of redistribution (a redistribution of
    values)

15
Redistributive Morality Policies
  • Abortion
  • Gay/Lesbian rights
  • Etc.

16
Redistributive Morality Policies
  • Characteristics
  • debate over first principles (core values/belief
    system) Costs/Benefits high for many
  • technically simple
  • highly salient to the general public
  • higher than normal level of citizen participation
  • Compromise is difficult, if not impossible to
    achieve

17
The Evolution of Abortion Policy
  • 1800s - state-level restrictions
  • therapeutic abortions justified based on health
    of mother
  • 1900s
  • new technology made childbirth safer
  • Doctors began to work more in hospitals
    (supervision) more tenuous legal position
  • American Law Institutes model code (1959)
  • Allowed abortion under 3 conditions
  • rape/incest, physical/mental defects, life of
    mother
  • the start of modern abortion regulation
  • Change in debate from medical to moral
  • Sherri Finkbine case (1962) (thalidomide)
  • single-issue groups

18
The Evolution of Abortion Policy
  • Source Mooney and Lee, American Journal of
    Political Science, 1995 (Vol. 39 599-627)

19
Evaluating the Impact of (Overturning) Roe vs.
Wade
  • What would happen to the abortion rate?

20
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21
Evaluating the Impact of (Overturning) Roe vs.
Wade
  • What would happen to the abortion rate?
  • Some women would still get abortions
  • Illegal abortions?
  • Interstate travel states as abortion magnets?
  • Some women would not get abortions
  • Consequences?

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