Category: Politics & Government 2182

  • Public Service Theories and Public Interest

    Table of Contents Abstract Economic theory Complexity theory Public administration and public interest References Abstract Public interest has been debated at length by great philosophers as well as renowned authors. Scholars argue that it is an academic discipline to be taught in class while philosophers argue that it is an art that can only be…

  • The Domestic Sources of American Foreign Domestic Policy

    Table of Contents Introduction Book Summary Importance of the topic Conclusion Works Cited Introduction The domestic sources of American foreign domestic policy is a masterpiece book by James McCormick. The book is about the US politics and international relations policies. The author is a professor who chairs the department of political science at Iowa State…

  • “The Clash of Civilizations?” by S. P. Huntington

    Wars are an inevitable part of human existence; they have significantly transformed throughout time. In Huntington’s (1993) article The Clash of Civilizations? the author argues that differences between civilizations might become causes of future violent wars. Fox (2005) argues that Huntington’s (1993) arguments are wrong even within the war on terror declared by the USA…

  • Policy Accumulation and Its Impacts on Modern Society

    The modern tendency of ongoing policy growth originally has a positive aim to provide society with decent laws protecting their rights and satisfying their needs. However, the rapid changes of policy accumulation can be more likely assessed as an attribution issue: the causative connection between policy interference and outcomes become foggy. The impact of all…

  • Territorial Incorporation and Expansionism Traditions

    The present paper is devoted to contrasting the doctrine of territorial incorporation (DTI) with colonialist (CTTE) and imperialist (ITTE) traditions of territorial expansionism. Venator-Santiago describes CTTE, ITTE, and DTI as three approaches to territorial expansionism that differed in multiple ways, including the purpose and way of acquisition and the resulting status of the acquired territory.…

  • Organization Theory and Classical Foundations

    Bureaucratic system perfectly fits in an unpretentious, legalistic, and rigid social order. It is irreconcilable with intricate, self-motivated, and idiosyncratic societies (Pershing & Austin, 2014). Bureaucratic system is predicted to be substituted by the age of innovativeness, and non-lawful, lenient means of power. Bureaucracy and democracy point toward standards for positioning authority and control that…

  • Judicial and Executive Branches and Their Roles

    Humans are social beings that prefer to live in a community that introduces the patterns that are used in everyday cooperation between its members. Besides, to avoid anarchy and outline limits that should regulate the communitys functioning and well-being, people are not able to act in the way they want. There are specific rules and…

  • Social Security Long-Term Solvency Problems

    Social Security is the federal insurance program in the United States handling Old Age, Survivors, and Disability Insurance (OASDI). Established in 1935, Social Security is funded by taxes from salaries and contributions from those in business or self-employed people. Internal Revenue Service (IRS) is the agent that collects them. The income collected from the taxes…

  • The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, 2009

    As President George W. Bush’s term moved closer to the end, a major financial crisis rocked the world. Prior to the onset of this major downward trend, the United States economy seemed to be thriving as financial institutions had generous consumer lending practices, and there was a lot of new money in the economy. Also,…

  • Seven Principles of Mission Command of Operation Anaconda

    Table of Contents Introduction Operation Anaconda Conclusion References Introduction War is an impossible phenomenon that continues to exist and arise even in modern developed societies. It is characterized by violent rivalries between peoples or powers, motivated by numerous political, ideological, or economic factors. Every commander is responsible for his subordinates and the course of military…