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What Do We Owe Each Other? - Rights and Obligations in Contemporary American Society (Paperback)
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What Do We Owe Each Other? - Rights and Obligations in Contemporary American Society (Paperback)
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What Do We Owe Each Other? includes essays by some of the finest
social and political policy researchers in the United States. They
address critical issues in contemporary American society. These
range from the making of public opinion, the nature of the presumed
social contract between government and its people, the special
place of corporate governance and institutional investors with
respect to social stability, the search for educational equality in
a world of growing income disparities, the huge run up in prison
populations and the decline of American citizenship, and not least,
the ethical issues of selfless and selfish motivations with respect
to organ transplants, and the sale of body parts.Although the
volume is clearly focused on the United States of the past and
present, it offers a long view of how social trends take on
distinctive moral characteristics. The opening essay by Katherine
Newman of Princeton University and Elisabeth Jacobs of Harvard
University carefully documents how the political and social goals
of the New Deal era outstripped the public opinion views of the
time. They rise to a special level of analysis on how the policy
processes can be uneven in one era and yet translate into a general
good in later periods. Economic recovery and ideological
dispositions were not in sync during the New Deal. As the
contributors show, such disparities remain true of the American
political process as a whole.The contributors display a wide
diversity of opinion, but the volume is unified by the belief that
ethical concerns play as large a role in defining American society
as do economic interests. The book should attract the attention of
political scientists, sociologists, economists, and above all,
those people interested in how policy analysis is fused with moral
considerations at the start as well as at the close of decision
making as such. Howard L. Rosenthal is a professor of politics at
New York University. He is the author of many journal articles and
coauthor, with Alberto Alesina of Partisan Politics, Divided
Government, and the Economy, and coauthor with Keith T. Poole of
Ideology and Congress (available from Transaction).
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