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- Title
Why PAR?
- Authors
Stillman, Richard J.; Raadschelders, Jos C. N.
- Abstract
Is the Public Administration Review still necessary? Some think that PAR, which debuted in 1940 as America's first and only generalist scholarly public administration journal, belongs to a bygone era of two-cent postage stamps—a time of coal furnaces, steam radiators, and wood-burning stoves, when language was crafted longhand or by manual typewriter; when a slide rule calculated most math problems; when a long-distance telephone call was rare and expensive; when the entire Army, Navy, and State departments were housed within a single building in Washington, DC, the Old Executive Office Building next to the White House; when President Franklin D. Roosevelt communicated to Americans through fireside chats; and when many in the United States still worried about keeping their jobs in the aftermath of the Great Depression, fiercely favoring isolationism over foreign entanglements and strict racial segregation throughout the South.
- Subjects
UNITED States; PUBLIC administration; PUBLIC welfare; SOCIAL services; PERIODICALS; FEDERAL employees (U.S.); GREAT Depression, 1929-1939; SEGREGATION; RACE discrimination
- Publication
Public Administration Review, 2006, Vol 66, Issue 1, p1
- ISSN
0033-3352
- Publication type
Editorial
- DOI
10.1111/j.1540-6210.2006.00550.x