Books

Total 73 results found.

Political Leadership

Political Leadership

A Source Book

An edited collection of seminal literature on political leadership. Essays range from ancient Greece to the twentieth century, covering pundits that include Plato, Machiavelli, and Freud.

Restructuring Domination

Restructuring Domination

Industrialists and the State in Ecuador

Using Ecuador as her case study, she shows how industrial growth has given birth to an exclusive, ingrown bourgeoisie that is highly dependent on the state and foreign capital and is increasingly alienated from the peasants and urban poor.

The Politics of the U.S. Cabinet

The Politics of the U.S. Cabinet

Representation in the Executive Branch, 1789-1984

Jeffrey E. Cohen presents a detailed, quantitative study of the characteristics of presidential cabinets from the days of George Washington through the first Reagan administration.

Imagery and Ideology in U.S. Policy Toward Libya 1969–1982

Imagery and Ideology in U.S. Policy Toward Libya 1969–1982

How close to reality was the official U.S. image of Libya through the Nixon-Ford, Carter, and Reagan administrations? ElWahrfally concludes that it was very far from accurate. Using personal interviews as well as scholarly research, ElWarfally demonstrates that U.S. relations with Libya, regardless of rhetoric, have been primarily determined by whether or not Libya serves U.S. interests in the region: maintaining access to Middle Eastern oil, protecting Israel, and limiting Soviet expansionism.

Economic Decline and Political Change

Economic Decline and Political Change

Canada, Great Britain, the United States

During the 1970s, Canada, Great Britain, and the United States witnessed unprecedented inflation, unemployment, and sluggish growth. This book examines government changes in economic policymaking and the public’s response to such changes, and sheds light on the political economy of three of the world’s oldest democracies.

Private Markets and Public Intervention

Private Markets and Public Intervention

A Primer for Policy Designers

Averch describes and analyzes common strategies for solving problems in public policy including the use of markets, bureaus, regulation, planning and budgeting, benefit-cost, systems analysis, and evaluation.

Traffic Safety Reform in the United States and Great Britain

Traffic Safety Reform in the United States and Great Britain

This book combines theory and research to analyze attempts to improve traffic safety through stricter drinking-age laws, seat-belt requirements, and deterrents to drunk driving.

History and Context in Comparative Public Policy

History and Context in Comparative Public Policy

Through a series of essays, this volume argues that every political system is based on a substratum of shared intentions, meanings, and rules of conduct embedded in a culture.

Interests and Institutions

Interests and Institutions

Substance and Structure in American Politics

Interest and Institutions is a collection of essays written by distinguished political scientist Robert Salsibury, a leading analyst of interest group politics. He offers his theories on the workings and influence of groups, organizations, and individuals in many different areas of American politics.

The Promise and Paradox of Civil Service Reform

The Promise and Paradox of Civil Service Reform

Fourteen essays examine, through a public policy focus, the 1978 civil service reform and its aftermath.

Careers in City Politics

Careers in City Politics

The Case for Urban Democracy

An in-depth view of the vital aspects of local politics-access to political office, individual office holder’s accountability to the public, the performance of councils as collective political bodies, and the often high turnover of personnel.

Making Common Sense of Japan

Making Common Sense of Japan

Steven Reed takes on the task of demystifying Japanese culture and behavior. Through examples that are familiar to an American audience and his own personal encounters, he argues that the apparent oddity of Japanese behavior flows quite naturally from certain objective conditions that are different from those in the United States. Two aspects of the Japanese economy have particularly baffled Americans: that Japanese workers have “permanent employment” and that the Japanese government cooperates with big business. Reed explains these phenomena in common sense terms. He shows how they developed historically, why they continue, and why they helped produce economic growth. He concludes that these practices are in fact, not very different from the United States.

Thatcher, Reagan, and Mulroney

Thatcher, Reagan, and Mulroney

In Search of a New Bureaucracy

Savoie examines the war of bureaucratic reform waged by the leaders of theree major industrial countries. Reagan, Thatcher and Mulroney were equally committed to reform and initiated wide-ranging changes. By the end of the 1990s, the changes were dramatic. Many governments operations had been privatized, and new management techniques had been introduced. Savoie suggests that the reforms overlooked problems now urgently requiring attention and, at the same time, attempted to address non-existent problems. He combines theory and research based on sixty-two interviews, nearly all with members of the executive branch of the governments of Britain, Canada and the United States.

Fragile Democracies

Fragile Democracies

The Legacies of Authoritarian Rule

Examining the Marcos and Aquino administrations in the Philippines, and a number of cases in Latin Amarica, Casper discusses the legacies of authoritarianism and shows how difficult it is for popularly elected leaders to ensure that democracy will flourish.

Regulation in the Reagan-Bush Era

Regulation in the Reagan-Bush Era

The Eruption of Presidential Influence

Explores the unprecedented influence of executive power over the federal regulatory process during the Ronald Regan and then George H. W. Bush presidencies.

Total 73 results found.