Continuing with the public policy you selected in Assignment 1, you will now describe and expand upon the influence, motives, and impacts of your chosen policy and its parameters. Write a 4–5 page paper in which you: • Write a one-page summary of the policy, including the purpose, the context of the problem, and any recommendations or suggestions from the policy to address the problem. (Use your summary skills to keep this to one page.) • Identify stakeholders that have primary interest in the policy parameters and their roles, along with any interest groups involved with your policy. • Of the list of stakeholders you identified, pick two and describe the political influence of each player, explaining motives, conflicts, interrelationships, and impacts on the policy. • Include at least four peer-reviewed references (no more than five years old) from material outside the textbook. Note: Appropriate peer-reviewed references include scholarly articles and governmental websites. Wikipedia, other wikis, and any other websites ending in anything other than “.gov” do not qualify as peer-reviewed. Use Basic Search: Strayer University Online Library to identify references. As you develop your paper, you may want to reference Communicating Uncertainty in Policy Analysis for a summary of policy analysis principles.

Continuing with the public policy you selected in Assignment 1, you will now describe and expand upon the influence, motives, and impacts of your chosen policy and its parameters. Write a 4–5 page paper in which you:

  • Write a one-page summary of the policy, including the purpose, the context of the problem, and any recommendations or suggestions from the policy to address the problem. (Use your summary skills to keep this to one page.)

 

  • Identify stakeholders that have primary interest in the policy parameters and their roles, along with any interest groups involved with your policy.

 
 

  • Of the list of stakeholders you identified, pick two and describe the political influence of each player, explaining motives, conflicts, interrelationships, and impacts on the policy.

 

  • Include at least four peer-reviewed references (no more than five years old) from material outside the textbook. Note: Appropriate peer-reviewed references include scholarly articles and governmental websites. Wikipedia, other wikis, and any other websites ending in anything other than “.gov” do not qualify as peer-reviewed. Use Basic Search: Strayer University Online Libraryto identify references.

As you develop your paper, you may want to reference Communicating Uncertainty in Policy Analysis for a summary of policy analysis principles.