Restructuring State and Local Services: Ideas, Proposals, and Experiments
By (Author) Arnold Raphaelson
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
23rd July 1998
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Central / national / federal government
Regional, state and other local government
Management and management techniques
Civil service and public sector
Public finance and taxation
Social and ethical issues
Social welfare and social services
352.292130973
Hardback
160
Under pressure from both the Federal government and private citizens, local and state governments are restructuring their services, including the areas of education, highway, and transportation. While the federal government wants to reassign responsibilities to local governments, voters want greater efficiency and lower taxes via privatization. This edited collection considers these pressures, the responses from state and local governments, and specific experiments in privatizing local services. The book's opening chapter presents an overview of the changing landscape, while the following chapters consider possibilities in both education and highway services. In education, interdistrict school choice and state-local structures are considered. Highway services are seen in federal-state and state-private relationships. Reporting on a variety of experiments, each chapter illustrates a type of service or arrangement for restructuring governmental services.
The overview essay by Bernstein and Raphaelson is an excellent summary of the issues, while the four case studies on interdistrict school choice (Stull and Stull), highways (Giglio), transportation (Windsor), and wine/liquor distribution (Buck) succeed in drawing important general lessons from specific privatization experiments. A useful addition to public policy collections. All levels.-Choice
"The overview essay by Bernstein and Raphaelson is an excellent summary of the issues, while the four case studies on interdistrict school choice (Stull and Stull), highways (Giglio), transportation (Windsor), and wine/liquor distribution (Buck) succeed in drawing important general lessons from specific privatization experiments. A useful addition to public policy collections. All levels."-Choice
Arnold H. Raphaelson is Professor of Economics at Temple University.