Publication Date
11-30-2009
Document Type
Article
Abstract
In this article, we examine the difficult leadership position President Barack Obama inherited as he took office with respect to science and technology policy making and implementation, particularly following the Bush administration and years of the so-called "war on science." We contend that the Obama administration's challenge is not only to take substantive policy action, but also to reform certain administrative practices, particularly in light of the previous administration's practice of the politics of strategic vacancies, a managerial technique that rearranges an agency's ideological inclinations not through the usual forms of active politicization (i.e., by filling the appointee ranks with like-minded ideologues) but instead by "starving" the agency of staff and co-opting its agenda that way.
Publication Title
Review of Policy Research
Volume
26
Issue
6
Publisher
pol_sci_papers
Included in
American Politics Commons, Policy Design, Analysis, and Evaluation Commons, Public Administration Commons, Public Policy Commons, Science and Technology Policy Commons