Description |
1 online resource (231 p.) |
Contents |
Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Table of Contents -- Figures -- Tables -- Editors -- Contributors -- Foreword -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: The Constitutional Tradition in Public Administration Ethics -- PART I: Freedom: Calling Health, Safety, and Financial Security into Question -- 1: Civil Servants on the Front-Lines of Greenhouse Gas Regulation: The Responsibilities of Public Administrators to Protect the Public in the Face of Recalcitrant Political Institutions -- 2: Regime Values in Disaster Management |
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3: Advancing Administrative Ethics through Needs-Based Budgeting Practice -- 4: Freedom v. Fairness: How Unresolved Normative Tension Contributed to the Collapse of the U.S. Housing Market in 2008-and Policymaker Inability to Reform It a Decade On -- PART II: Property: New Forms of Property Reinvigorating Long-standing Debates -- 5: Due Process and Property: What Process Is Due? -- 6: Property, Intellectual Property, and Ethics in Public Administration |
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7: Privacy as a Supra-Regime Value: The Ethical Argument for a New Evolution of Regime Values to Better Protect Financial Privacy in Local Governments -- 8: Property and Emerging Institutional Types: The Challenge of Private Foundations in Public Higher Education -- PART III: Social Equity: The New Frontier of Diversity and Inclusion -- 9: Non-binary Gender Identity: Challenging Public Values and Reshaping Institutions -- 10: Social Equity and Voting Rights: A Shrinking Regime -- 11: A Proposal for Strategic Controls to Ensure Social Equity in the Criminal Justice System |
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12: Advancing Social Equity through Increased Access to Residential Broadband -- Conclusion: Where the Constitution Can Lead Us -- Index |
Notes |
Description based upon print version of record |
Form |
Electronic book
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Author |
Olejarski, Amanda M
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ISBN |
9781000041156 |
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1000041158 |
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