The Neoconservatives: The Men who are Changing America's PoliticsAn extended analysis of the philosophy and activities of such men as Daniel P. Moynihan, Daniel Bell, and Irving Kristol, of their concerns and successes, and of their growing influence in every area of society. |
Contents
The Significance of Neoconservatism | 1 |
TWO The Road to Neoconservatism | 25 |
THREE What Neoconservatives Believe | 49 |
Copyright | |
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Aaron Wildavsky academic affirmative action American American conservatism anti-Communism argument authority believe Bell's Books capitalism Cheers civil Commentary concern conflict conservatism conservative corporate counterintellectual crisis critics Cultural Contradictions Daniel Bell Daniel Patrick Moynihan defend demands democracy Democratic Idea economic egalitarian End of Ideology equality essay established fact favor foreign policy groups Guaranteed Income Huntington ibid individual inequality insist institutions Irving Kristol issue Journal Kadushin leaders Left legitimacy less liberal liberty major mass McCarthyism meritocracy modern moral movement Moynihan Report Nathan Glazer Negro neoconservatism's neoconservatives Nisbet Nixon Norman Podhoretz percent perhaps philosophy political politicians Post-Industrial Society poverty President principle problems professionals professors programs Public Interest questions racial radical reality realm reform religion responsibility role Seymour Martin Lipset sixties social socialist status theory tion tradition Trilateral United values Vietnam welfare Wildavsky writes York Review