1st Edition

Priorities in Nuclear Technology Program Prosperity and Decay in the United States Atomic Energy Commission, 1956-1971

By Irvin C. Bupp Copyright 1988
    364 Pages
    by Routledge

    364 Pages
    by Routledge

    Originally published in 1988. This book considers why some public policies succeed and others do not. It looks at the entrepreneurial process that creates public policies and examines whether they prosper or falter because of their political consequences. The programs and personnel of the Atomic Energy Commission are the empirical foundation for these arguments. The data generated by that agency's annual budget-making cycles, collected over time and organised by program, are used as evidence to test some propositions about policy formation within the executive branch of government. The author's concern is with questions of where and how priorities are established in a complex institutional environment. To answer the more fundamental causal question of why some programs prosper while others wither or die, use is made of more historical analysis and comparison of the fortunes of several of AEC's efforts to develop applied nuclear technology.

    1. Fiscal Year 1967 2. The Politics of Program Prosperity 3. The AEC's Civilian Power Reactor Program 4. Plowshare 5. The Consequences of Administration 6. Organisation Adaptability and Program Prosperity

    Biography

    Irvin C. Bupp