The presidency and the agencies of the executive branch are deeply interwoven with other core institutions of American government and politics. While the framers of the Constitution granted power to the president, they likewise imbued the legislative and judicial branches of government with the powers necessary to hold the executive in check. The Executive Branch, edited byJoel D. Aberbach and Mark A. Peterson, examines the delicate and shifting balance among the three branches of government, which is constantly renegotiated as political leaders contend with the public's paradoxical...
The presidency and the agencies of the executive branch are deeply interwoven with other core institutions of American government and politics. While ...
The presidency and the agencies of the executive branch are deeply interwoven with other core institutions of American government and politics. While the framers of the Constitution granted power to the president, they likewise imbued the legislative and judicial branches of government with the powers necessary to hold the executive in check. The Executive Branch, edited byJoel D. Aberbach and Mark A. Peterson, examines the delicate and shifting balance among the three branches of government, which is constantly renegotiated as political leaders contend with the public's paradoxical...
The presidency and the agencies of the executive branch are deeply interwoven with other core institutions of American government and politics. While ...
Peter J. Hammer Deborah Haas-Wilson Mark A. Peterson
This volume revisits the Nobel Prize-winning economist Kenneth Arrow's classic 1963 essay -Uncertainty and the Welfare Economics of Medical Care- in light of the many changes in American health care since its publication. Arrow's groundbreaking piece, reprinted in full here, argued that while medicine was subject to the same models of competition and profit maximization as other industries, concepts of trust and morals also played key roles in understanding medicine as an economic institution and in balancing the asymmetrical relationship between medical providers and their patients. His...
This volume revisits the Nobel Prize-winning economist Kenneth Arrow's classic 1963 essay -Uncertainty and the Welfare Economics of Medical Care- in l...
Presenting a collection of field-defining published works, both classical and contemporary, these four volumes define health systems, consider tensions in health policy, look at health systems comparatively, and examine the politics of health system reform.
Presenting a collection of field-defining published works, both classical and contemporary, these four volumes define health systems, consider tension...