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Twenty-six-year-old American Ernest Pope arrived in Munich as a
Reuters correspondent in in 1936. From then until he left in the
summer of 1940 he saw first-hand the wild excesses of the Nazis. He
wrote mainly for British newspapers-notably the Daily Express-but
after September 1939 he could only supply material to the USA as
lines to Britain were closed. As events hotted up he left for home
just two months prior to America's entry to the war. Back in the
safety of the United States he spent six months writing down what
he had seen and who he had met. With wicked wit and superb style he
ridicules the Nazis, showing them up for what they truly
were-boorish and evil thugs. His narrative reads like a sensational
novel, but for the poor inhabitants of Germany the unbelievable was
in fact everyday life. Pope knew, saw or interviewed all the top
Nazis and dozens of lower-level officials, including some of
Hitler's security men. Fluent in Bavarian German dialect, Pope made
many friends in Munich with citizens and officials alike. He heard
jokes from Munichers that could get them thrown in a concentration
camp and he poked fun at Nazis whenever he dared. Munich Playground
is a 'must read' for anyone who wishes to understand what Hitler's
Third Reich was really like.
Despite decades of attempts and the best intentions of its members,
the United States Supreme Court has failed to develop a coherent
jurisprudence regarding the state's proper relationship to the
individual. Without some objective standard upon which to ground
jurisprudence, decisions have moved along a spectrum between
freedom and authority and back again, affecting issues as diverse
as individual contractual liberties and the right to privacy.
Social Contract Theory in American Jurisprudence seeks to
reintroduce the lessons of modern political philosophy to offer a
solution for this variable application of legal principle and to
lay the groundwork for a jurisprudence consistent in both theory
and practice. Thomas R. Pope's argument examines two exemplary
court cases, Lochner v. New York and West Coast Hotel v. Parrish,
and demonstrates how the results of these cases failed to achieve
the necessary balance of liberty and the public good because they
considered the matter in terms of a dichotomy. Pope explores our
constitution's roots in social contract theory, looking
particularly to the ideas of Thomas Hobbes for a jurisprudence that
is consistent with the language and tradition of the Constitution,
and that is also more effectually viable than existing
alternatives. Pope concludes with an examination of recent cases
before the Court, grounding his observations firmly within the
developments of ongoing negotiation of jurisprudence. Addressing
the current debate between individual liberty and government
responsibility within the context of contemporary jurisprudence,
Pope considers the implications of a Hobbesian founding for modern
policy. This book will be particularly relevant to scholars of
Constitutional Law, the American Founding, and Modern Political
Theory.
Despite decades of attempts and the best intentions of its members,
the United States Supreme Court has failed to develop a coherent
jurisprudence regarding the state's proper relationship to the
individual. Without some objective standard upon which to ground
jurisprudence, decisions have moved along a spectrum between
freedom and authority and back again, affecting issues as diverse
as individual contractual liberties and the right to privacy.
Social Contract Theory in American Jurisprudence seeks to
reintroduce the lessons of modern political philosophy to offer a
solution for this variable application of legal principle and to
lay the groundwork for a jurisprudence consistent in both theory
and practice. Thomas R. Pope's argument examines two exemplary
court cases, Lochner v. New York and West Coast Hotel v. Parrish,
and demonstrates how the results of these cases failed to achieve
the necessary balance of liberty and the public good because they
considered the matter in terms of a dichotomy. Pope explores our
constitution's roots in social contract theory, looking
particularly to the ideas of Thomas Hobbes for a jurisprudence that
is consistent with the language and tradition of the Constitution,
and that is also more effectually viable than existing
alternatives. Pope concludes with an examination of recent cases
before the Court, grounding his observations firmly within the
developments of ongoing negotiation of jurisprudence. Addressing
the current debate between individual liberty and government
responsibility within the context of contemporary jurisprudence,
Pope considers the implications of a Hobbesian founding for modern
policy. This book will be particularly relevant to scholars of
Constitutional Law, the American Founding, and Modern Political
Theory.
Approximately one-quarter of the U.S. population is enrolled in
HMOs or similar managed care health plans, and the proportion is
increasing. But even though such plans dominate today's agenda for
health care reform, good, quantitative information on the
performance of managed care programs is scarce. In "Promise and
Performance in Managed Care," Donald Freeborn and Clyde Pope draw
on the research literature and unique data sources to provide that
information.
Focusing on the human experience of managed care, the authors
examine the effects of managed care on members as well as
physicians--assessing whether members are satisfied with the care
they receive, and how physicians evaluate their experience with
managed care. After offering a brief history of managed care in the
United States, the book addresses such questions as what determines
the choice of a health plan, access to care, patient satisfaction,
physician satisfaction, and the implications of these findings for
the future of managed care.
With the issue of health care reform in the forefront of
national debate, the topics raised in "Promise and Performance in
Managed Care" are particularly timely. Serving as both a standard
against which to examine the effectiveness of proposed reforms and
as a methodological "how to" for the evaluation of system changes,
the book will be of interest to professionals and students of
health policy as well as to HMO administrators and
practitioners.
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