The Politics of Major Policy Reform in Postwar America examines the
politics of recent landmark policy in areas such as homeland
security, civil rights, health care, immigration and trade, and it
does so within a broad theoretical and historical context. By
considering the politics of major programmatic reforms in the
United States since the Second World War - specifically, courses of
action aimed at dealing with perceived public problems - a group of
distinguished scholars sheds light not only on significant efforts
to ameliorate widely recognized ills in domestic and foreign
affairs but also on systemic developments in American politics and
government. In sum, this volume provides a comprehensive
understanding of how major policy breakthroughs are achieved,
stifled, or compromised in a political system conventionally
understood as resistant to major change.
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