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U.S. Politics & Government - 1945 - 1989, U.S. Politics & Government - 1945 to Present, U.S. Politics - Public Affairs & Administration
Government's Greatest Achievements by Paul Charles Light β€” book cover

Government's Greatest Achievements

by Paul Charles Light
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Overview

In an era of promises to create smaller, more limited government, Americans often forget that the federal government has amassed an extraordinary record of successes over the past half century. Despite seemingly insurmountable odds, it helped rebuild Europe after World War II, conquered polio and other life-threatening diseases, faced down communism, attacked racial discrimination, reduced poverty among the elderly, and put men on the moon. In Government's Greatest Achievements, Paul C. Light explores the federal government's most successful accomplishments over the previous five decades and anticipates the most significant challenges of the next half century.

While some successes have come through major legislation such as the 1965 Medicare Act, or large-scale efforts like the Apollo space program, most have been achieved through collections of smaller, often unheralded statutes. Drawing on survey responses from 230 historians and 220 political scientists at colleges and universities nationwide, Light ranks and summarizes the fifty greatest government achievements from 1944 to 1999. The achievements were ranked based on difficulty, importance, and degree of success. Through a series of twenty vignettes, he paints a vivid picture of the most intense government efforts to improve the quality of life both at home and abroad β€”from enhancing health care and workplace safety, to expanding home ownership, to improving education, to protecting endangered species, to strengthening the national defense. The book also examines how Americans perceive government's greatest achievements, and reveals what they consider to be its most significant failures.

America is now calling on the government to resolve another complex, difficult problem: the defeat of terrorism. Light concludes by discussing this enormous task, as well as government's other greatest priorities for the next fifty years.

About the Author, Paul Charles Light

Paul C. Light is the Paulette Goddard Professor of Public Service at New York University. He is also Douglas Dillon Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution, where he founded the Center for Public Service. Light is the author of numerous books on public service and management, among them Pathways to Nonprofit Excellence (2002), Government's Greatest Achievements (2002), Making Nonprofits Work (2000), and The New Public Service (1999).

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Editorials

Booknews

This volume presents the results of a three-year study on the federal government's successes and failures of the last fifty years. The researchers focused on groups of laws designed to solve specific problems, such as improving access to health care or rebuilding Europe after WWII. They conclude that government works best when leaders identify a clear problem and then pursue solutions in a bipartisan manner. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Book Details

Published
April 30, 2002
Publisher
Washington, D.C. : Brookings Institution Press, c2002.
Pages
241
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780815706045

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