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This book addresses the proliferation of legal constraints on policymaking in the executive branch of the federal government and highlights the risks and dangers this poses for public policy.
This book examines the Soviet Union and the gradual process of liberalization in its press and government.
One of the most eminent authors on Latin America addresses questions crucial to US policy in the Caribbean area.
This study is concerned primarily with comparing the behavior of for-profit, public, and voluntary hospitals.
In response to renewed concerns over illnesses related to blood transfusions, this volume provides two diverging perspectives on how a high-quality blood supply can best be achieved and maintained.
This is the 11th in the American Enterprise Institute's continuing series of annual reviews of the work of the United States Supreme Court.
Between August 1933 and spring 1934, more than seven million peasants were starved to death in Ukraine by deliberate Soviet national policy.
This volume suggests strategies to ease the stress posed by disruptions in the oil supply.
In this brief volume, an eminent Islamic scholar tries to demonstrate to Westerners how his faith influences the everyday life of its practitioners.
The authors review the empirical evidence concerning the Food and Drug Administration's effect on the rate of innovation, the delays in introducing new drugs, and the profitability of pharmaceutical research.
Australia at the Polls combines scholarship with commentary, providing the full analysis and data thatmake it indispensable to the specialist without lapsing into technical language and terminology.
Minimum Wages: Measures and Industry Effects by John M. Peterson deals with the adverse effects of minimum wages on employment by industry.
The dramatic increase in the demand for nursing-home care during the past two decades can be attributed to two factors: the growing number of elderly people and the greater availability of such care under the Medicaid program, enacted in 1965.
Money and Liberty, by S. Herbert Frankel, examines the psychological and political foundations of the modern money economy.
The substance of the federal form of government is largely determined by the degree of independence accorded the individual states. This study examines one proposal to increase federal standard on state unemployment insurance benefits.
National Health Insurance in Ontario: The Effects of a Policy of Cost Control by William S. Comanor examines the implications for the United States of Ontario's experience with national health insurance.
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