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Politics and the Professors - The Great Society in Perspective (Paperback)
Loot Price: R523
Discovery Miles 5 230
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Politics and the Professors - The Great Society in Perspective (Paperback)
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Loot Price R523
Discovery Miles 5 230
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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In the early 1960s America was in a confident mood and embarked on
a series of efforts to solve the problems of poverty, racial
discrimination, unemployment, and inequality of educational
opportunity. The programs of the Great Society and the War on
Poverty were undergirded by a broad consensus about what our
problems as a nation were and how we should solve them. But by the
early seventies both political and scholarly tides had shifted.
Americans were divided and uncertain about what to do abroad,
fearful of military inferiority, and pessimistic about the capacity
of government to deal affirmatively with domestic problems. A new
administration renounced the rhetoric of the Great Society and
changed the emphasis of many programs. On the scholarly front, new
research called into question the old faiths on which liberal
legislation had been based. In this book, the sixteenth volume in
the Brookings series in Social Economics, Henry Aaron describes
both the initial consensus and its subsequent decline. He examines
the evolution of attitude and pronouncements by scholars and
popular writers on the role of the federal government and its
capacity to bring about beneficial change in three broad areas:
poverty and discrimination, education and training, and
unemployment and inflation. He argues that the political eclipse of
the Great Society depended more on events external to it--war in
Vietnam, dissolution of the civil rights coalition, and, finally,
the Watergate scandal and all its repercussions--than on its
intrinsic failings. Aaron concludes that both the initial
commitment to use national polices to solve social and economic
problems and the subsequent disillusionment of scholars andlaymen
alike rest largely on preconceptions and faiths that have little to
do with research themselves.
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