Review:
With this book ÝSidney Verba¨ adds to his series of stimulating and influential studies of values and political life...One wishes that more books in political science these days had a subject as crucial to political life, as rich in comparative empirical data, as creative and sophisticated in methodological approaches, and as original and significant in its insights. -- Ellis S. Krauss "Journal of Public Policy"
find this book thoughtful and provocative.
issue in society that are, by definition, bypassed in more narrowly focused research.
life, as rich in comparative empirical data, as creative and sophisticated in methodological approaches, and as original and significant in its insights.
An excellent pathway to consider allocation decisions in different types of welfare states. Government officials, social scientists, and individuals concerned with the future direction of industrial societies will find this book thoughtful and provocative. -- Steven Puro "Perspective"
This research program has produced and extraordinarily stimulating set of results. But its chief virtue is that it posed conceptually and then pursued empirically the kinds of very broad questions about a central issue in society that are, by definition, bypassed in more narrowly focused research. -- Henry A. Landsberger "Contemporary Sociology"
With this book [Sidney Verba] adds to his series of stimulating and influential studies of values and political life...One wishes that more books in political science these days had a subject as crucial to political life, as rich in comparative empirical data, as creative and sophisticated in methodological approaches, and as original and significant in its insights. -- Ellis S. Krauss "Journal of Public Policy"
Verba and his colleagues have done a fine job of gathering and analyzing data that call seriously into question both the Marxist view that bourgeois societies will inevitably tolerate great income differences and the Tory fear that democracy will inevitably lead to leveling and expropriation...[They] make a convincing case that the U.S. income distribution is as it is in large part because that is the way political elites--even relatively leftist ones--prefer it to be. -- -James Q. Wilson "The Public Interest"
About the Author:
Sidney Verba is Carl H. Pforzheimer University Professor, Harvard University.
Kabashima is a professor of political science in the Faculty of Law, the University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan.
Steven Kelman is the Weatherhead Professor of Public Management at Harvard University's John F. Kennedy School of Government. From 1993 to 1997 he administered the Office of Federal Procurement Policy at the U.S. Office of Management and Budget, where he was a leading figure in " reinventing government" efforts. His previous books include "Procurement and Public Management: The Fear of Discretion and the Quality of Government Performance and "Making Public Policy: A Hopeful View of American Government.
Gary R. Orren is Associate Professor of Public Policy at Harvard University s Kennedy School of Government.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.