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Academic Journals
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From:Government Computer News (Vol. 24, Issue 3)The General Services Administration is trying to head off--or help out--Rep. Tom Davis before he demands the agency make organizational changes. The Virginia Republican, chairman of the House Government Reform...
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From:Newfoundland and Labrador Studies (Vol. 27, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedINTRODUCTION As was the case in many countries in the early twentieth century, there was a strong temperance movement in Newfoundland. Pressure from these advocates led the government under People's Party Prime...
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From:The Chronicle of Philanthropy (Vol. 19, Issue 18)Byline: Holly Hall The Postal Service's Board of Governors last week rejected a plan to give nonprofit groups and other mailers a temporary discount for "flats," mail pieces that are larger than letters. The...
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From:The Energy Journal (Vol. 15, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedPublic utility commissions are using 'adders' as a state program for measuring welfare and environmental damage cost. However, some critics are questioning the validity of adders as a marketable permit program. An...
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From:Harvard Law Review (Vol. 135, Issue 6)The climate is changing and so must our energy sources. But how do we get there? Who decides when and where to build new power stations across the country? And critically, which resources should power those...
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From:Journal of Consumer Affairs (Vol. 23, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThe study reported here attempts to determine the impact of several political factors, including the type of proxy advocacy provided by state government, on flat-rate, residential telephone service. Results indicate that...
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From:Washington University Journal of Law & Policy (Vol. 67)Systematic racial and ethnic inequality can only be reversed by systematic action. After the killing of Michael Brown by the Ferguson police in August 2014, Missouri's need for judicial and legal reform could no longer...
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From:Alternatives Journal (Vol. 32, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedWHAT does food democracy look like? Start with thousands of people across Canada talking about food, giving presentations about the state of the food system and offering their solutions at a people's commission on food....
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From:Government Computer News (Vol. 14, Issue 23)Is your agency succeeding on the bleeding edge? Then get some recognition for your work. The Public Employees Roundtable is seeking nominations for its 1996 Public Service Excellence Awards. The Washington non-profit...
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From:Business History Review (Vol. 64, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedCorporate Liberalism and Electric Power System Planning in the 1920s During the 1920s two groups of political leaders and engineers advocated opposing plans to restructure the electric utility industry in the...
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From:Land Economics (Vol. 70, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedA second best framework was used to identify the situations in which existing environmental regulations can possibly be improved by Public Utility Commissions (PUCs). Three decisions that are or may be regulated by PUCs...
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From:The Public Manager (Vol. 34, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThere is nothing new about corruption; it has been around for a long time. As far back as 300 B.C., Katilya, the then Prime Minister and Emperor Chandragupta of India, identified forty ways of embezzlement of funds by...