Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Digital Commons Network

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Articles 1 - 5 of 5

Full-Text Articles in Entire DC Network

Regulation Of Electric Utilities: An Interview With Commissioner Elizabeth Paine, Elizabeth Paine Jan 1992

Regulation Of Electric Utilities: An Interview With Commissioner Elizabeth Paine, Elizabeth Paine

Maine Policy Review

Elizabeth Paine has been a commissioner of the Maine Public Utilities Commission for three years. Her experience with the PUC goes back to 1981, when she joined the PUC staff as a financial analyst. Maine Policy Review is pleased to present this interview with Commissioner Paine on issues related to electric utility regulation in Maine.


The Legal Implications Of Values Education, Brian C. Shaw Jan 1992

The Legal Implications Of Values Education, Brian C. Shaw

Maine Policy Review

As Rushworth Kidder noted in another article in this issue, the mere mention of values education creates a stir among its advocates and detractors. Brian Shaw, a Portland attorney whose practice focuses in part on public school law, was asked by Maine Policy Review to address the legal issues involved in values education in public schools. The article includes an overview of those issues and, by way of illustration, a case study from a Maine school district.


In Search Of A Strong Agenda: An Interview With Kenneth M. Curtis, Kenneth Curtis Jan 1992

In Search Of A Strong Agenda: An Interview With Kenneth M. Curtis, Kenneth Curtis

Maine Policy Review

In an interview this fall with Maine Policy Review, Kenneth Curtis, the former governor, former chairman of the Democratic National Committee, and former U.S. ambassador to Canada, shared his insights into the civic and political life of Maine and the nation. Not surprisingly, Curtis, currently president of Maine Maritime Academy, argues that many attitudes about the ineffectiveness and the unresponsiveness of government could be overcome by strong leadership from the executives of federal and state governments. He asserts that federal and state chief executives need to offer a vision of the future, put forth strong political agendas, and then …


Reflections On Citizenship: Thinking About Power As Interaction, Leslie I. Hill Jan 1992

Reflections On Citizenship: Thinking About Power As Interaction, Leslie I. Hill

Maine Policy Review

The steady decline of participation in many areas of public life suggests that we may be overlooking power as not only a source of the problem, but also as a critical part of the solution. Leslie Hill argues that to revive concepts of citizenship and democratic participation enshrined in the language of the nation's founding, we ought to rethink conventional ideas about power as control and domination and, in the alternative, view power as interaction. She also suggests that we need to adopt new approaches to civic education that include this concept of power as interactive politics. Underlying this argument, …


Assessing Public Participation In Maine: The Old And The New In Civic Involvement, David D. Platt Jan 1992

Assessing Public Participation In Maine: The Old And The New In Civic Involvement, David D. Platt

Maine Policy Review

Lack of citizen participation in American government is a complaint frequently voiced by politicians, political scientists and media commentators. The steady decline in voting, the rising number of Americans who say they are disaffected with their government, and the increase in two-earner households all have been cited as evidence of this decreased involvement by Americans in public life. Maine, with its long tradition of participatory democracy, reflected in town meeting government at the local level, is not necessarily a microcosm of what is occurring nationally. The state has, however, experienced its share of some of the civic maladies note nationally, …