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In this illuminating examination of the Obama presidency, the
contributors describe the policy directions followed, and the
administration s level of success in achieving its objectives.
Throughout the Obama administration, efforts were intended to
alleviate the worst of the economic stress facing the nation, move
the president closer to the center of the American political
spectrum, and prepare for the upcoming reelection campaign, to be
fought primarily on the same issues as the earlier one. The
contributors present an analysis of the motivations and political
thinking underlying the administration s action along with
assessments of the policy consequences of the issue agenda favored
and the public s reaction. The Obama Presidency is an in-depth
account of one of the most intriguing and important presidencies at
a time of economic crisis that goes a long way in explaining the
policy decisions made and their political consequences, as well as
the choices facing a nation in transition.
America may be one of the wealthiest countries in the world, but
its citizens rank near the bottom in health status. Americans have
lower life expectancy, more infant mortalities and higher
adolescent death rates than most other advanced industrial
nations-and even some developing countries. Though Americans are
famous for tolerating great inequality in wealth, the gross
inequities in the health system are less well recognized. In
Healthy, Wealthy and Fair, a distinguished group of health policy
experts chart the stark disparities in health and wealth in the
United States. The authors explain how the inequities arise, why
they persist, and what makes them worse. Growing income inequality,
high poverty rates, and inadequate health care coverage: all three
trends help account for the U.S.'s health troubles. The corrosive
effects of market ideology and government stalemate, the
contributors argue, have also proved a powerful obstacle to
effective and more egalitarian solutions. A clarion call for a
populist uprising to end the stalemate over health reform, Healthy,
Wealthy, and Fair outlines concrete policy proposals for
reform-tapping bold new ideas as well as incremental changes to
existing programs. This important work will be indispensable to all
those who care about our people's health, inequality, and American
democracy.
In this illuminating examination of the Obama presidency, the
contributors describe the policy directions followed, and the
administration's level of success in achieving its objectives.
Throughout the Obama administration, efforts were intended to
alleviate the worst of the economic stress facing the nation, move
the president closer to the center of the American political
spectrum, and prepare for the upcoming reelection campaign, to be
fought primarily on the same issues as the earlier one. The
contributors present an analysis of the motivations and political
thinking underlying the administration's action along with
assessments of the policy consequences of the issue agenda favored
and the public's reaction. The Obama Presidency is an in-depth
account of one of the most intriguing and important presidencies at
a time of economic crisis that goes a long way in explaining the
policy decisions made and their political consequences, as well as
the choices facing a nation in transition.
American politics today is in an uproar: loud, angry, and bitter,
bristling with us-versus-them. This is not exactly new. The history
of our political life is teeming with nastiness, violence,
intolerance, and cheating. Yet we can sense that there is something
genuinely different about the current turmoil. Politics has turned
tribal in an unprecedented way. What changed? The answer, according
to renowned political scientist James Morone, lies in the way
political parties have operated throughout American history. From
the beginning, parties sowed division and discord, but the deepest,
most contentious issues facing our society -- questions about who
we are -- didn't split along partisan lines. So for a time, parties
actually assuaged these conflicts. One side defended slavery but
welcomed immigrants; the other side called for abolition but
harbored deep hostility for Irish, German, and Italian newcomers.
Then, as the United States underwent a series of profound societal
transformations -- from reconstruction, to the explosion of
populism, to the Great Migration, to the Civil Rights movement --
the alignment slowly shifted. African Americans switched sides to
support the Democrats, the party that had fought tooth and nail
against expanding their rights, while the Republicans turned whiter
and more nativist. In this sweeping, revelatory work of political
history, Morone shows how these changes upended the role of
parties, creating a single division that would consume every
debate. Rich with absorbing vignettes, Republic of Wrath explains
our current state of unrest with bracing clarity -- and tells the
story of American politics as we've never heard it before.
America may be one of the wealthiest countries in the world, yet
its citizens have lower life expectancy, more infant mortalities,
and higher adolescent death rates than those in most other advanced
industrial nations--and even some developing countries. In Healthy,
Wealthy, and Fair a distinguished group of health policy experts
pointedly examines this troubling paradox, as they chart the stark
disparities in health and wealth in the United States. Rich in
insight and extensive in scope, these incisive essays explain how
growing income inequality, high poverty rates, and inadequate
coverage combine to create the U.S.'s current healthcare
difficulties. Ultimately, Healthy, Wealthy, and Fair not only
identifies the problems contributing to America's healthcare woes
but also outlines concrete policy proposals for reform, issuing a
clarion call to end the stalemate over health reform.
Is there an American culture? Certainly, says James Morone.
Americans are fighting over it now. They have been fighting over it
since the first Puritan stepped ashore. Americans hate government
(no national health insurance!) and call for more of it (lock 'em
up!). They prize democracy (power to the people) and scramble to
restrict it (the electoral college in the 21st century?). They
celebrate opportunity-but only for some (don't let those people
in!). Americans proclaim liberty then wrestle over which
kind-positive (freedom from want) or negative (no new taxes!)? In
this volume Morone offers his own answer to the conundrum of
American political culture: It is a perpetual work in progress.
Immigrants arrive, excluded groups demand power, and each
generation injects new ethnicities, races, religions, ideas, foods,
entertainments, sins, and body types into the national mix. The
challengers-the devils we know-keep inventing new answers to the
nation's fundamental question: Who are we? Each essay in The Devils
We Know takes up a different aspect of the creative conflicts that
shape America. Ranging from Huck Finn to Obamacare, Morone explores
the ways in which culture interacts with other forces-most notably
the rules and organizations that channel collective choices. The
battle to define the nation's political culture spills over into
every area of American life, but three are especially important:
democracy, economics, and morals - each, in turn, complicated by
race, race, race.
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