TY - BOOK AU - Freeman,Jody AU - Minow,Martha TI - Government by contract: outsourcing and American democracy SN - 9780674032088 (alk. paper) AV - HD3861.U6 G678 2009 U1 - 352.5/30973 22 PY - 2009/// CY - Cambridge, Mass. PB - Harvard University Press KW - Contracting out KW - United States KW - Privatization N1 - Includes bibliographical references (p. [363]-512) and index; Introduction: government by contract: outsourcing and American democracy / Jody Freeman and Martha Minow -- Recent developments -- Public-private governance: an historical introduction / William J. Novak -- The transformation of government work: causes, consequences and distortions / John Donahue -- The federal framework for competing commercial work between the public and private sectors / Matthew Blum -- Cases and critiques -- Rent-a-regulator: design and innovation in environmental decisionmaking / Miriam Seifter -- Outsourcing power: privatizing military efforts and the risks to accountability, professionalism, and democracy / Martha Minow -- How privatization thinks: the case of prisons / Sharon Dolovich -- Responses and reforms -- A. Don't increase regulation -- Achieving contracting goals and recognizing public law concerns: a contracting management perspective / Steven J. Kelman -- Federal contracting in context: what drives it, how to improve it / Stan Soloway and Alan Chvotkin -- B. Use existing tools -- Some legal reforms to increase contractor accountability / Nina A. Mendelson -- Privatization and democracy: resources in administrative law / Alfred C. Aman, Jr -- Press constitutional restrictions -- Private delegations, due process, and the duty to supervise / Gillian E. Metzger -- Outsourcing and the duty to govern / Paul R. Verkuil -- Public values/private contract / Laura A. Dickinson N2 - The Political Worlds of Slavery and Freedom re-examines the history of slavery and emancipation in the United States by emphasizing the political agency of enslaved and freed African Americans. Hahn argues that slavery was not merely an economic institution but a fundamentally political system that shaped power relations, resistance, and identity in profound ways. Moreover, emancipation did not end this political struggle but instead transformed it, as freedpeople continued to fight for their rights and self-determination. UR - http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip0821/2008027501.html ER -