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Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons

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Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences

Closing The Class Gap In Civic Participation, Amy Fried Jan 1999

Closing The Class Gap In Civic Participation, Amy Fried

Maine Policy Review

In the Margaret Chase Smith essay, Amy Fried discusses the implications of increasing class stratification on civic participation in the United States. She suggests that public schools can play an important role in improving citizen engagement.


What Would Margaret Chase Smith Have Made Of Bill Clinton’S Tragi-Comedy?, Charles Calhoun Jan 1999

What Would Margaret Chase Smith Have Made Of Bill Clinton’S Tragi-Comedy?, Charles Calhoun

Maine Policy Review

In the Margaret Chase Smith Essay, Charles Calhoun reflects on President Bill Clinton’s presidency, with its accomplishments and his personal flaws. He speculates on what Margaret Chase Smith would have thought about Clinton.


Performance Government In Maine: The Effort To Make State Government More Efficient, Responsive, And Accountable, Bruce Clary, Barton Wechsler Jan 1999

Performance Government In Maine: The Effort To Make State Government More Efficient, Responsive, And Accountable, Bruce Clary, Barton Wechsler

Maine Policy Review

Maine, like the federal government and many other states, has embarked upon a major initiative to change how government conducts its business. At the federal level this initiative has been called the National Performance Review. Spearheaded by Vice President Al Gore, its goal is nothing short of reinventing government so it performs better, costs less, and gets results. Today, many states have undertaken initiatives similar to the National Performance Review and the general term used to describe these activities is “performance government.” In Maine, a 1991 Special Commission on Governmental Restructuring marks the first time this concept was seriously talked …


Performance Government: A Roundtable Discussion Jan 1999

Performance Government: A Roundtable Discussion

Maine Policy Review

Many states have undertaken initiatives similar to the National Performance Review; the general term used to describe these activities is “performance government.” Although performance government may apply to a wide range of administrative changes, it most typically applies to three reform initiatives: strategic planning, performance budgeting and performance contracting. Maine has been reinventing its government systems to include each of these components. This roundtable discussion, co-facilitated and co-edited by Bruce Clary and Barton Wechsler, features eight individuals who have been helping to shape the reinvention of Maine state government: besides Clary and Wechsler, these include: Carolyn Ball, Charles Colgan, Merton …


Maine’S Dubious Odyssey Into The Funding Of Local Government, Peter Mills Jan 1999

Maine’S Dubious Odyssey Into The Funding Of Local Government, Peter Mills

Maine Policy Review

Despite recent reforms to Maine’s school funding, State Senator Peter Mills argues that the formula will not be truly “fixed” until the state addresses the municipal side of property tax inequities. To that end, he prescribes some tough medicine for Maine policymakers to relieve the disproportionate tax burden on the state’s service center communities. Among other things, he suggests we consider repealing some of the exemptions that exclude a quarter of all property from taxation; permitting service centers to adopt local option taxes; and injecting the state’s limited revenue sharing funds into just those municipalities with intolerable tax burdens that …