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Developing a Paradigm for Worldwide Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender Public Policy and Administration

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Developing a Paradigm for Worldwide Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender Public Policy and Administration
Author(s)Swan, Wallace; Mazur, Paul
AbstractThis article develops a framework for communication between the Marxian and neoclassical paradigms. Both involve political ideologies, neoclassicals being broadly-defined liberals. But similarities exist: both see individual and collective interests in conflict, while a simple description of Marxian socialism approaches the liberals’ idealized vision of capitalism in some key ways. In addition to the neoclassical natural/technical constraints, Marxism sees a capitalist societal constraint. The group versus individual conflict then appears as between class and individual interests. Further, unlike in liberalism, technology and individual wants are endogenous. Even capitalism reflects a balance of conflicting dynamics forces toward persistence and dissolution.
IssueNo1
Pages5-12
ArticleAccess to Article
SourceInternational Journal of Public Administration
VolumeNo25
PubDateJanuary 2002
ISBN_ISSN0190-0692

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