Journal Article - Communications of the ACM
Prospects for Improving the Regulatory Process Using E-Rulemaking
U.S. citizens participate directly in rulemaking—a deliberate agenda-setting process designed to elicit, sort, and clarify fact and opinion from a wide variety of interested parties. The rulemaking process offers a directness and scope for public participation unavailable in other policy-making processes.
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For more information on this publication:
Belfer Communications Office
For Academic Citation:
Fountain, Jane E. “Prospects for Improving the Regulatory Process Using E-Rulemaking.” Communications of the ACM, vol. 46. no. 1. (May 31, 2003) .
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U.S. citizens participate directly in rulemaking—a deliberate agenda-setting process designed to elicit, sort, and clarify fact and opinion from a wide variety of interested parties. The rulemaking process offers a directness and scope for public participation unavailable in other policy-making processes.
To view full text please see PDF below (login may be required).
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