Pennsylvania Pension Blues (original) (raw)

Private Affluence and Public Squalor: Social Injustice and Economic Misery in America

Private Affluence and Public Squalor: Social Injustice and Economic Misery in America, 2018

This draft manuscript, which still needs serious editing, is an effort to document and describe the extent to which a wide array of social and economic problems in the contemporary United States are caused and exacerbated by the influence of an ideology based upon individualism - aka liberalism - and a conception of the market economy that has long since ceased to explain economic reality.

Bridges Volume 1, Issue 1

Bridges, 2019

This is a collection of beautiful, critical, supporting, and loving articles written by graduate students. The authors in this first issue grapple with the realities of our current moment in ways that both acknowledge the significance of past scholarship while also mapping new pathways that put Foundations to work in (more) public ways.

The State of American Federalism, 2002-2003: Division Replaces Unity

Publius: The Journal of Federalism, 2003

ABSTRACT The national unity formed last year in response to terrorism soon vanished as more typical political infighting returned. Although overshadowed by the buildup to and the conduct of a second war against Iraq, political issues grounded in the nation's federal character contributed to a rise in divisiveness. The mid-term elections of 2002 and redistricting battles in several states drove partisanship to new heights. The continued sluggishness of the nation's economy also exacerbated interparty bickering. Republicans controlled the White House and both houses of Congress, yet some of the president's policy initiatives encountered more serious resistance in his own party than from the opposition. Many of the feuds within the majority party rested on state and regional interests typical of federalism politics. State and local governments remained trapped in the third year of a fiscal crisis, and even large reductions in expenditures did not extricate these governments from the financial fix. Despite their pleas, state and local officials were unable to obtain any significant relief from the federal government. Federal-state relations, as a consequence, exhibited more contentiousness than cooperation. Copyright 2003, Oxford University Press.