American Politics Today - Essentials (3rd Ed)

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ENDNOTES A47


  1. Henry J. Aaron, Politics and the Professors: The Great Society
    in Perspective (Washington, DC: Brookings Institution Press,
    1978).

  2. Stephen Moore, “How the Budget Revolution Was Lost,”
    Cato Policy Analysis no. 281, September 2, 1997, Cato
    Institute, http://www.cato.org/pubs/pas/pa-281.html (accessed
    7/21/08).

  3. Clyde Wayne Crews Jr., “Ten Thousand Commandments,” An
    Annual Snapshot of the Federal Regulatory State,” 2003 ed.
    (Washington, DC: Cato Institute, 2003), http://www.cato.org/tech/
    pubs/10kc_2003.pdf (accessed 7/15/08).

  4. Richard P. Nathan, The Administrative Presidency (New York:
    Wiley, 1983).

  5. Andrew Rudalevige, “The Structure of Leadership: Presi-
    dents, Hierarchies, and Information Flow,” Presidential Stud-
    ies Quarterly 35 (2005): 333–60.

  6. David E. Lewis, Presidents and the Policy of Agency Design
    (Palo Alto, CA: Stanford University Press, 2003).

  7. Terry Moe, “An Assessment of the Positive Theory of Congres-
    sional Dominance,” Legislative Studies Quarterly 4 (1987):
    475–98.

  8. William A. Niskanen, Bureaucracy and Public Economics
    (Washington, DC: Edward Elgar, 1976); Robert Waples and
    Jac C. Heckelman, “Public Choice Economics: Where Is There
    Consensus?” American Economist 49 (2005): 66–79.

  9. Alan Schick and Felix LoStracco, The Federal Budget: Politics,
    Process, Policy (Washington, DC: Brookings Institution Press,
    2000).

  10. Joel D. Aberbach, “The Political Signifi cance of the George W.
    Bush Administration,” Social Policy and Administration 39:2
    (2005): 130–49.

  11. David E. Lewis, “The Politics of Agency Termination: Con-
    fronting the Myth of Agency Immortality,” Journal of Politics
    64 (2002): 89–107.

  12. Ronald A. Wirtz, “Put It on My... Er, His Tab: Opinion Polls
    Show a Big Gap between the Public’s Desire for Services and
    Its Willingness to Pay for These Services,” Fedgazette, Janu-
    ary 2004, http://www.minneapolisfed.org/pubs/fedgaz/04-01/tab
    .cfm (accessed 7/16/08).

  13. Harris Poll, “Cutting Government Spending May Be Popular
    But Majorities of the Public Oppose Cuts in Many Big Ticket
    Items in the Budget,” March 1, 2012, http://www.harrisinteractive
    .com (accessed 7/19/12).

  14. Paul Light, “Measuring the Health of the Public Service,” in
    Workways of Governance, ed. Roger Davidson (Washington,
    DC: Brookings Institution Press, 2003).

  15. Paul Light, A Government Well-Executed: Public Service and
    Public Performance (Washington, DC: Brookings Institution
    Press, 2003).

  16. This discussion of the details of the civil service system is
    based on Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Career Guide to Indus-
    tries,” March 12, 2008, http://www.bls.gov/oco/cg/cgs041.htm
    (accessed 7/16/08).

  17. Dennis Cauchon, “Some Federal Workers More Likely to Die
    Than Lose Jobs,” USA Today, July 19, 2011, p. A1.

  18. Karen Orren and Steven Skorownek, “Regimes and Regime
    Building in American Government: A Review of the Literature
    on the 1940s,” Political Science Quarterly 113 (1998): 689–702.

  19. Michael Nelson, “A Short, Ironic History of American National
    Bureaucracy,” Journal of Politics 44 (1982): 747–78.

  20. Nelson, “A Short, Ironic History of American National
    Bureaucracy.”

  21. Nelson, “A Short, Ironic History of American National
    Bureaucracy.”

  22. John Aldrich, Why Parties? (Chicago: University of Chicago
    Press, 1995).

  23. Nelson, “A Short, Ironic History of American National
    Bureaucracy.”

  24. Matthew A. Crenson, The Federal Machine: Beginnings of
    Bureaucracy in Jacksonian America (Baltimore, MD: Johns
    Hopkins University Press, 1975).

  25. James Q. Wilson, “The Rise of the Bureaucratic State,” in
    The American Commonwealth, ed. Nathan Glazer and Irving
    Kristol (New York: Basic Books, 1976).

  26. Skowronek, Building a New American State.

  27. Robert Harrison, Congress, Progressive Reform, and the New
    American State (New York: Cambridge University Press,
    2004).

  28. The U.S. State Department has an excellent summary of the
    Pendleton Act at http://usinfo.state.gov/usa/infousa/facts/
    democrac/28.htm.

  29. Lawrence C. Dodd and Richard L. Schott, Congress and the
    Administrative State (New York: John Wiley, 1979).

  30. William Riordan, Plunkitt of Tammany Hall: A Series of Very
    Plain Talks on Very Practical Politics (1924; repr. New York:
    Signet Classics, 1995).

  31. Ira Katznelson and Bruce Pietrykowski, “Rebuilding the
    American State: Evidence from the 1940s,” Studies in Ameri-
    can Political Development 5:2 (1991): 301–39.

  32. David Plotke, Building a Democratic Political Order: Reshap-
    ing American Liberalism in the 1930s and 1940s (New York:
    Cambridge University Press, 1996).

  33. Theda Skocpol and Kenneth Finegold, “State Capacity and
    Economic Intervention in the Early New Deal,” Political Sci-
    ence Quarterly 97 (1999): 255–70.

  34. Michael Brown, “State Capacity and Political Choice: Inter-
    preting the Failure of the Third New Deal,” Studies in Ameri-
    can Political Development 9 (1995): 187–212.

  35. Ira Katznelson, Kim Geiger, and Daniel Kryder, “Limiting Lib-
    eralism: The Southern Veto in Congress, 1933–1950,” Political
    Science Quarterly 108 (1993): 283–306.

  36. Joseph Califano, “What Was Really Great about the
    Great Society,” Washington Monthly, October 1999, www
    .washingtonmonthly.com/features/1999/9910.califano.html
    (accessed 7/16/08).

  37. David T. Canon, Race, Redistricting, and Representation: The
    Unintended Consequences of Black Majority Districts (Chi-
    cago: University of Chicago Press, 1999).

  38. Charles Murray, Losing Ground: American Social Policy,
    1950–1980 (New York: Basic Books, 1984)

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