Abstract
Research in presidential agenda setting in domestic policy arenas is lacking, and this study seeks to address this inadequacy in the research. Presidential agendas in crime control from 1963-1990 are examined to trace patterns over time and to examine individual presidential behavior. Five hypotheses concerning patterns of agenda setting are tested, none of which are supported to any great extent in the analysis. The analysis demonstrates that domestic agenda setting follows different patterns from those of international agenda setting, at least in this one particular domestic arena.
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