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One of the most urgent issues facing the United States today is how
to establish a comprehensive health insurance program at a time
when nearly one in seven Americans lack insurance and costs for
health care and medical fees are increasing at about 20 percent
annually. An interdisciplinary team of experts provides a unique
overview of the most important current problems and speaks to the
key questions of risk, allocation, and equity. This text is
designed for college, university, and professional courses in
health and medical policy, public policy, public administration,
law and society, bioethics, nursing, science and technology, and
hospital administration. This public policy study offers a general
framework for assessing health insurance from many vantage points,
in terms of health policy impacts, the care of the needy, health
insurance implementation, and prevention and risk. Chapters assess
various national health insurance proposals, current congressional
action and Medicare decisions, the social impacts of health
insurance policy, coverage for displaced workers, the uninsured and
hospital care in the inner city, charity care and community
benefits, insuring high-risk persons, preventive health care
screening for older women, and medical malpractice insurance, among
other subjects. These analyses with real-life examples provide a
solid introduction to all who want to understand health insurance
and public policy issues today.
How does the Chinese government deal with its social problems
and set up its systems of social security, health care,
environmental control, population control, and economic
development? In this book, Chinese and Western experts analyze the
nature of public policymaking in China, specific measures and
alternatives, and various methodological approaches. Students,
scholars, policymakers, and practitioners in political science and
public administration will find this unique study an invaluable one
for understanding the little-known public policy process in
China.
This expert analysis opens with two chapters providing
background on the study of public policy and political science in
China today. Four chapters then define specific policy problems and
measures to reform the social security system, health care
administration, and environmental control and to promote economic
development in relation to decentralization or centralization of
government administration. Two chapters describe super-optimizing
analysis and solutions in policy problems. The collection closes
with an insider's perspective and a frequent visitor's perspective
on public policy in China today.
This is one of the very first studies by Chinese and Western
experts to examine the current picture of public administration in
China. Mills and Nagel provide a general background into the nature
of public administration in China, specific reforms in government
agencies, personnel administration and compensation, and
administrative law. Insiders and frequent visitors evaluate the
state of public administration today for scholars, students, and
practitioners in public administration and political science.
This unique appraisal opens with a general discussion of public
administration in China and the teaching of administrative science.
The second section defines basic concepts behind China's
administration systems, current reforms, constraints on Chinese
bureaucracy and coordination, and administrative law. The third
section of the book describes efforts underway to promote a better
quality of personnel, to appraise performance more fully, and to
reevaluate methods of compensation. In conclusion, insiders to
China provide current assessments of the situation in China
currently in the field of public administration.
Kurt Mills investigates how the concept of sovereignty is changing as a result of normative, empirical, and institutional developments. From a normative political theory perspective he argues that respect for human rights, popular sovereignty, and self-determination are inherent in the social purpose of the state and thus must be considered when evaluating claims to sovereignty and non-intervention. Human Rights in the Emerging Global Order examines how recent international practice in the areas of human rights, self-determination, refugees and human migration and humanitarian intervention are challenging traditional conceptions of sovereignty in important, yet ambiguous, ways. Finally, it provides policy prescriptions to deal with these continuing humanitarian problems.
Mills focuses on one of the most significant parts of the
sovereignty debate on human rights and humanitarian issues and
raises three interrelated questions. First, how are empirical
processes and practices undermining traditional notions of
sovereignty? These include actions by the United Nations and other
organizations on behalf of human rights, such as humanitarian
intervention, the movements of refugees and others across the
borders, and increasing calls for communal self-determination.
Second, taking into account the above question, and examining these
issues from a normative political theory perspective, what should
be the relationship between individuals, groups, states, and the
international community with respect to the twin aspects of power
and authority inherent in sovereignty? Third, what new or modified
international institutions may be needed in the future to deal with
these humanitarian issues?
This is an insightful overview of what is happening at the cutting
edge of professional public policy analysis. Written by a
well-known expert, the survey assesses the many and varied aspects
of the policy studies discipline. Stuart Nagel has provided an
analysis of the profession that will be useful to practitioners and
academics, as well as students and teachers, at both the
undergraduate and graduate levels. This survey begins by suggesting
ways for professionals to become more effective and
interdisciplinary in their approaches to dealing with public
policy. The author also analyzes cross-cutting governmental
activities and different theoretical perspectives. He points to
means for achieving policy goals, for selecting among alternative
policies, and to the organizations and institutions that are
concerned with public policy. A bibliography notes the most
important recent publications dealing with professional
developments in the field.
This volume is designed to provide a framework for studying the
public policy implications of a broad range of biomedical
technologies. Each chapter focuses on the policy issues and
political activities surrounding a single technology. Contributors
address such issues as new reproductive technologies, animal
experimentation, contraceptive drugs, genetic markers and
technology and the aging society.
This edited book by Mills and Karp brings together political, legal
and moral perspectives on the responsibilities of human rights
protection in world politics today. It critiques a narrow focus on
states' 'violations' of human rights, incorporates non-state
actors, and looks beyond the 'Responsibility to Protect' policy
framework.
The burgeoning of court litigation and the resulting logjams in
the judicial system have spawned new ways for attorneys and their
clients to resolve disputes quickly and at a lower cost.
Alternative dispute resolution is one important way of doing this.
Editors Nagel and Mills, along with their contributors, explore the
theory and practice of this technique. They demonstrate how to
clarify, understand and develop the various options available under
alternative dispute resolution, and how to evaluate the probable
outcomes. Among the tools available to facilitate dispute
resolution are microcomputer-based, rule-based expert systems and,
for specific fields of dispute, decision-aiding software.
The editors delineate several ways in which participants in a
dispute win or lose. The most desirable are the super-optimum
solutions in which all sides come out ahead of their best
expectations. They point out that win-win solutions are not as
desirable as would seem at first glance since parties only come out
ahead relative to their worst expectations. Subject matter for
resolution methods include disputes involving family members,
neighborhoods, merchants-consumer, management-labor, legislation
and foreign countries. Scholars, lawyers and policy-makers will
find this book a valuable resource.
This work examines the topic of dispute resolution, specifically
the multi-criteria approach that seeks to arrive at a conclusion
that is mutually beneficial to both sides. Through the use of
decision-aiding software, the multi-criteria approach can allow
each side to give on various criteria that are not important to it,
but are important to the other side. In this way, a super-optimum
solution may even be met, in which both sides receive something
significantly better than they had expected. Such a result is very
difficult, if not impossible, to achieve, Stuart Nagel points out,
in traditional single-dimension dispute resolution.
Nagel and Mills describe the nature of multi-criteria dispute
resolution utilizing decision-aiding software. The first part of
the book clarifies the general character of computer-aided
negotiation, computer-aided mediation, and super-optimizing dispute
resolution. Part two guides the reader through the use of
Policy/Goal Percentaging (P/G%) decision-aiding software, centering
on general decision-making, negotiation, mediation, and prediction
of outcomes. Multi-criteria resolution in the context of
rule-making and legal policy disputes is the focus of part three,
where such matters as determining initial alternatives and
criteria, resolving deadlocks, and arriving at super-optimum
solutions are discussed. Part four emphasizes dispute resolution in
the context of rule-applying and litigation disputes, as well as
mediation at the international level and between lawyers and
clients. The final part deals with future applications, such as
computer-aided mediation and group decision-making with phone
modems. The book's combination of decision-aiding software,
arbitration-mediation, and super-optimum expansionist
decision-making brings a truly innovative approach to the topic of
dispute resolution. This volume should be a welcome addition to
academic, legal, and public libraries, and a valuable reference
work for lawyers, law students, and legal professors and
researchers.
This work represents a broad-based perspective of the conflict
resolution process. While related books have tended to specialize
on specific settings, this volume gives in-depth treatment of four
various settings--environmental risk resolution, rule-making in the
public sector, consumer disputes, and contracts and the courts. It
also examines future models for resolving disputes. With its
contributions from both practitioners and theorists in the
art/science of conflict resolution, this volume properly emphasizes
the important role that public policy plays in the settlement of
societal conflict.
The first section of the book deals with dispute resolution
related to environmental issues. Articles in this section address
negotiations in the area of hazardous waste, present a review of
the timber, fish, and wildlife policy negotiations of Washington
State, and examine environmental regulation in the Reagan era. The
second section focuses on consumer disputes in two areas--utilities
and those exposed unwittingly to asbestos. The third section
discusses contracts and the limitations of courts as a higher
authority. The fourth section reviews negotiated rule-making in
administrative settings. The final portion presents a modern
approach to dispute resolution using decision-aiding software. This
book serves as valuable reading for anyone interested in the
interconnected fields of dispute resolution and public policy.
Knowledge Services Management looks at the transformation of the
traditional workplace into a quasi-internal market environment
where work activities in knowledge services are organized around
clusters of similar or complementary knowledge stocks to address
particular types of customer-clients priorities. The book explores
a new internal market structure for these service organizations and
the implications this presents for managers and scholars in the
21st century workplace. By adopting an internal market perspective,
the book develops new organizational forms outside the traditional
hierarchical paradigm, which is ill-suited for the emerging
knowledge workplace, in order to effectively manage emerging
knowledge services. The indispensable role of customer/client in
the operations of these organizations is examined, as is the
creation of the "Proventure Workplace," a work environment which
accentuates jobs requiring rich cognitive skills for continuing
innovation and creativity.
This edited book by Mills and Karp brings together political, legal
and moral perspectives on the responsibilities of human rights
protection in world politics today. It critiques a narrow focus on
states' 'violations' of human rights, incorporates non-state
actors, and looks beyond the 'Responsibility to Protect' policy
framework.
Knowledge Services Management looks at the transformation of the
traditional workplace into a quasi-internal market environment
where work activities in knowledge services are organized around
clusters of similar or complementary knowledge stocks to address
particular types of customer-clients priorities. The book explores
a new internal market structure for these service organizations and
the implications this presents for managers and scholars in the
21st century workplace. By adopting an internal market perspective,
the book develops new organizational forms outside the traditional
hierarchical paradigm, which is ill-suited for the emerging
knowledge workplace, in order to effectively manage emerging
knowledge services. The indispensable role of customer/client in
the operations of these organizations is examined, as is the
creation of the "Proventure Workplace", a work environment which
accentuates jobs requiring rich cognitive skills for continuing
innovation and creativity.
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Beyond the Pale
Anita K Mills
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