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Full Description
Through an exclusive focus on public policy advocacy, Dalton and Butler offer practical guidance for determining the fundamental issues that make up a controversy and what expectations public audiences will have for advocacy based on the issues and the burdens of advocates challenging or defending the status quo. Through examples that span a wide range of advocacy situations and subjects of contemporary importance, the authors build a framework for public policy advocacy that is organic to the communication discipline, recover and refresh foundational lessons about the uses of evidence, and provide critical questions that can be used to develop and communicate policy proposals that are sensible and appealing. Written in an accessible, respectful, and motivational style, the book is suitable for students of debate, professionals who function as advocates, and people who wish to voice their opinion.
Contents
Acknowledgments - Preface - Emergence - Orientation - Analyzing Issues and Policy Propositions - Arguing - Understanding Stock Issues in Public Policy Advocacy - Reasoning I: Reasoning about Cause - Reasoning II: Reasoning by Deduction, Induction, and Analogy - Evidence I: Theories and Uses - Evidence II: Evaluation - Reasonable Goals - Targeting Your Audience - Adapting to the Advocacy Setting - Appendix - Index.