Public Policy and the Public Good
As a reading of the recent literature indicates, there has been a trend among public policy analysts to disavow the utility of the Western political tradition for understanding contemporary social dilemmas. This edited collection demonstrates that the history of political philosophy actually increases the awareness of the nature of such problems. By employing models of historical understanding, the contributors permit political theory to illuminate the dilemmas underlying modern policy questions and permit historical theorists to model perspectives that are useful in confronting current policy alternatives.

Each of the book's ten chapters, written by some of today's most respected political theorists, explains how knowledge of a specific historical thinker or school of thought can lead to a clearer appreciation of a particular contemporary American policy issue. Among the topics included are an analysis of capital punishment from the perspective of ancient Judaic law; Plato on television news; Aristotle on the crisis in American public education; Aquinas on the controversies involved in American health care policy; Martin Luther on political leadership in democracies; a Hobbesian approach to American interest-group liberalism; a Lockean appraisal of North American native peoples' land claims; a modern republican examination of affirmative action; a liberal critique of surrogate motherhood; and Marx on the social consequences of computer technology. Together, these chapters serve to highlight the Western political tradition and put its accumulated wisdom to use in solving current policy questions. This book will be a valuable resource for courses in public policy analysis, American political thought, and Western political philosophy. Both public and academic libraries will also find it to be a useful addition to their collections.

1000865980
Public Policy and the Public Good
As a reading of the recent literature indicates, there has been a trend among public policy analysts to disavow the utility of the Western political tradition for understanding contemporary social dilemmas. This edited collection demonstrates that the history of political philosophy actually increases the awareness of the nature of such problems. By employing models of historical understanding, the contributors permit political theory to illuminate the dilemmas underlying modern policy questions and permit historical theorists to model perspectives that are useful in confronting current policy alternatives.

Each of the book's ten chapters, written by some of today's most respected political theorists, explains how knowledge of a specific historical thinker or school of thought can lead to a clearer appreciation of a particular contemporary American policy issue. Among the topics included are an analysis of capital punishment from the perspective of ancient Judaic law; Plato on television news; Aristotle on the crisis in American public education; Aquinas on the controversies involved in American health care policy; Martin Luther on political leadership in democracies; a Hobbesian approach to American interest-group liberalism; a Lockean appraisal of North American native peoples' land claims; a modern republican examination of affirmative action; a liberal critique of surrogate motherhood; and Marx on the social consequences of computer technology. Together, these chapters serve to highlight the Western political tradition and put its accumulated wisdom to use in solving current policy questions. This book will be a valuable resource for courses in public policy analysis, American political thought, and Western political philosophy. Both public and academic libraries will also find it to be a useful addition to their collections.

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Public Policy and the Public Good

Public Policy and the Public Good

by Ethan M. Fishman
Public Policy and the Public Good

Public Policy and the Public Good

by Ethan M. Fishman

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Overview

As a reading of the recent literature indicates, there has been a trend among public policy analysts to disavow the utility of the Western political tradition for understanding contemporary social dilemmas. This edited collection demonstrates that the history of political philosophy actually increases the awareness of the nature of such problems. By employing models of historical understanding, the contributors permit political theory to illuminate the dilemmas underlying modern policy questions and permit historical theorists to model perspectives that are useful in confronting current policy alternatives.

Each of the book's ten chapters, written by some of today's most respected political theorists, explains how knowledge of a specific historical thinker or school of thought can lead to a clearer appreciation of a particular contemporary American policy issue. Among the topics included are an analysis of capital punishment from the perspective of ancient Judaic law; Plato on television news; Aristotle on the crisis in American public education; Aquinas on the controversies involved in American health care policy; Martin Luther on political leadership in democracies; a Hobbesian approach to American interest-group liberalism; a Lockean appraisal of North American native peoples' land claims; a modern republican examination of affirmative action; a liberal critique of surrogate motherhood; and Marx on the social consequences of computer technology. Together, these chapters serve to highlight the Western political tradition and put its accumulated wisdom to use in solving current policy questions. This book will be a valuable resource for courses in public policy analysis, American political thought, and Western political philosophy. Both public and academic libraries will also find it to be a useful addition to their collections.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780313272240
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 05/30/1991
Series: Contributions in Political Science , #27
Pages: 200
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.50(d)
Lexile: 1380L (what's this?)

About the Author

ETHAN FISHMAN is a Professor of Political Science at the University of South Alabama. He specializes in the application of classic Western values to contemporary American politics. Dr. Fishman is the author of Likely Stories: Essays on Political Philosophy and Contemporary American Literature and has written articles for various jourbanals, including American Politics Quarterly and The Jourbanal of Politics.

Table of Contents

Foreword by Benjamin R. Barber
Introduction by Ethan Fishman
The Rabbi and the Fig Tree: A Lesson for the Supreme Court on Capital Punishment by Ethan Fishman
Plato and the Media by Barry Cooper
The Tide Just Keeps Rising: An Aristotelian Perspective on the Crisis in American Education by R. Bruce Douglass
Aquinas, Prudence, and Health Care Policy by Clarke E. Cochran
Martin Luther on Political Leadership by Robert Booth Fowler
A Hobbesian Analysis of the Dangers of Interest-Group Liberalism by Timothy Fuller
Native Peoples and Lockean Philosophy: Land Claims and Self-Government by Thomas Flanagan
The Republican Tradition and Affirmative Action by Richard M. Battistoni
Surrogate Motherhood: Contract, Gender, and Liberal Politics by Alfonso J. Damico
Marx and the Computer by Victor Ferkiss
Selected Bibliography
Index

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