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Centro de Estudios Municipales y de Cooperación Internacional (CEMCI)

THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF ISRAELI-PALESTINIAN INTERDEPENDENCE

REUVENY, RAFAEL

Policy Studies Journal, n.º 4/1999, pág. 643

Sumario
1. Interdependence, conflict, and cooperation. 2. Amodel of Israeli-Palestinian interactions. 3.Israeli-Palestinian economic interdependence. 4. Violentcycles. 5. The logic of separation. 6. The policies ofseparation.7.

THE POLITICAL LEADERSHIP OF WOMEN AND PUBLIC POLICYMAKING

BURRELL, BARBARA

Policy Studies Journal, n.º 4/1997, pág. 565

Sumario
1. References.

THE POLITICS AND ADMINISTRATION OF PRIVATIZATION: EFFORTS AMONG LOCAL GOVERNMENTS

DALEY, DENNIS

Policy Studies Journal, n.º 4/1996, pág. 629

Sumario
1. Privatization and the Delivery of public services. 2. A passing fad it is not. 3. The antigovernment ideology. 4. The promise of productivity improvement. 5. Conclusion.

THE POLITICS OF CONNECTIVITY: THE ROLE OF BIG BUSINESS IN UK EDUCATION TECHNOLOGY POLICY

SELWYN, NEIL;FITZ, JOHN

Policy Studies Journal, n.º 4/2001, pág. 551

Sumario
1. The NGfL as Public/Private Policy. 2. Questioning Public/Private Policymaking in Education. 3. Methods of Inquiry. 4. The Public/Private Origins of the NGfL. 5. The IT Industry and Its Participation in the Formation of the NGfL. 6. The Sustainability of Private Sector Involvement in the NGfL. 7. Discussion. 8. Conclusion.

THE POLITICS OF ENVIRONMENTAL RISK: PERCEPTIONS OF RISK ASSESSMENT IN THE STATE LEGISLATURES

COHEN, NEVIN

Policy Studies Journal, n.º 3/1997, pág. 470

Sumario
1. Growth in the use of risk assessment. 2. Risk as an arcane subject. 3. The survey. a) Survey instrument. b) Representativeness of responses. c) Statistical tests reported. 4. Results. a) Self-evaluation of risk assessment knowledge. b) Legislators desire basic environmental risk information. c) Riskiness of chemicals. d) Extrapolation from animal studies. e) Perceptions of dose-response. f) Effects of toxic chemical exposure. g) Attitudes toward use of risk assessment. h) Risk management decisions.

THE POLITICS OF FINANCIAL SERVICES LIBERALIZATION: THE CASE OF THE CANADIAN INVESTMENT DEALER INDUSTRY

HARRIS, STEPHEN L.

Policy Studies Journal, n.º 3/1998, pág. 526

Sumario
1. Theoretical underpinnings: Politics and economics of interests and regulation. a) Regulatory capture. b) Some final theoretical considerations. 2. The case study of canadian liberalization. a) The stimulus forchange. b) The OSC hearings: The industry-regulator debate. c) The ingredients shaping the OSC decision. d) The industryreaction to the OSC decision. e) Another impulse for change:a new chairman of the OSC. 3. The Policy Change. a) DecisionI: The first slice. b) Decision II: Phased but total liberalization. 4. Conclusion.

THE POLITICS OF POLICY: PROSPECTS AND REALITIES

DESAI, UDAY;HOLDEN, MATTHEW;SHELLEY, MACK

Policy Studies Journal, n.º 3/1998, pág. 423

Sumario
1. An Agenda. a) Using what we already know. b)What policy is worth studying? c) What do we want to know,and why? d) Political naïveté and political maturity ofjudgment. e) Public and private power. f) Political feasibility and viability. 2. This symposium. a) Anoverview. b) The individual articles. 3. Conclusion.

THE POLITICS OF TOXIC WASTE

RAHM, DIANNE

Policy Studies Journal, n.º 4/1998, pág. 679

Sumario
1. Nuclear and chemical weapons. 2. Managing toxicwaste cleanup. 3. Toxic waste as a local issue.

THE POLITICS OF WATERSHED POLICYMAKING

WOOLEY, JOHN T.;MCGINNIS, MICHAEL VICENT

Policy Studies Journal, n.º 3/1999, pág. 578

Sumario
1. The Salmon crisis: The rise of watershedorganization in three rivers. 2. Case studies. 3. Casecomparison based on survey data. 4. Summary.

THE PROBLEMS OF A PALESTINE THAT WOULD BE ECONOMICALLY AUTONOMOUS: A COMMENTARY

SHARKANSKY, IRA

Policy Studies Journal, n.º 4/1999, pág. 665

Sumario
1. A geography that does not support autonomy. 2.Doubts with respect to outside aid or trading partners. 3.A contrary analysis.

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