Boomerang : Clinton's health security effort and the turn against government in U.S. politics / Theda Skocpol.
Material type:
- 0393039706
- 9780393039702
- Health care reform -- United States
- Social security -- United States -- History
- United States -- Social policy -- 1993-
- United States -- Politics and government -- 1993-2001
- Reforma en el cuidado de la salud -- Estados Unidos
- Seguridad social -- Estados Unidos
- Política de salud -- Estados Unidos
- Salud -- Estados Unidos
- Servicios de salud -- Estados Unidos
- 20151100
- 362.1/0973
- RA 395 S628b 1997
Item type | Current library | Home library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Biblioteca Juan Bosch | Biblioteca Juan Bosch | Salud | Anillo 2do. Piso | RA 395 S628b 1997 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 00000093024 |
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No cover image available | No cover image available | ||
RA 395 R383s 2007 A second opinion rescuing America's health care ; a plan for universal coverage serving patients over profit | RA 395 S181 2000 La salud en América Latina : de la reforma para unos a la reforma para todos / | RA 395 S555d 2004 Delivering health care in America : a systems approach / | RA 395 S628b 1997 Boomerang : Clinton's health security effort and the turn against government in U.S. politics / | RA 395 V443i 2010 Igualdad y diversidad : un enfoque crítico de la justicia social en la salud / | RA 395.3 B979 2008 The business of healthcare | RA 395.3 B979 2008 The business of healthcare |
Includes bibliographical references (p. 189-217) and index.
Health reform, a popular issue that Bill Clinton and the Democrats skillfully featured in the 1992 campaign, became the spearpoint of the most concerted attack on government in recent American history. One year after it had been introduced to acclaim from almost all quarters, Clinton's compromise plan lay in political wreckage.
In this incisive account, a prize-winning Harvard social scientist draws on contemporary documents, media coverage, and confidential White House strategy memos to offer deep insights into the changing terrain of U.S. politics and public policy. President Clinton and his closest advisers thought they had found an ideal "middle way" between excessive government regulation end the play of free market forces in their plan to extend health care coverage to all Americans, not foreseeing that they were creating an ideal target for their political enemies. By 1994 the conservatives needed a cause to attract middle-class voters and unite widespread groups in opposition to the federal government and an already weakened Democratic party. The Health Security bill, as Theda Skocpol discloses, inadvertently became a perfect foil for antigovernment mobilization. Its enemies found it easy to distort while its supporters failed to marshal their forces at a critical time.
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