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Home >  Books >  Science Policy from Ford to Reagan
Science Policy from Ford to Reagan
Print Mail
Change and Continuity
By Claude Barfield
Posted: Saturday, January 1, 2000
Science Policy from Ford to Reagan
AEI Press  (Washington)
Publication Date: December 1982
Paperback
ISBN: 0-8447-3494-2
Hardcover
ISBN: 0-8447-3495-0

This title is currently out of print, but online booksellers sometimes have used copies available. See links below.

This is the first monograph to analyze and compare the federal science policies under the most recent administrations--those of Presidents Ford, Carter, and Reagan. It focuses on four areas of research: basic research, defense R&D, energy R&D,  and space R&D. In pursuing new goals for the federal science policy, the author states, the Reagan adminstration has:

  • more sharply demarcated the roles of the federal government and the private sector, substantially curtailing support for demonstration and commercialization projects
  • relied on indirect incentives to foster industrial innovation, dismantling programs of direct government intervention undertaken by the Carter adminstration
  • dramatically revised priorities, allocating more than 60 percent of federal R&D support to defense and 66 percent of energy R&D support to nuclear programs

Despite these far-reaching changes, the adminstration has reaffirmed the importance of science to the advancement of national goals and the need for the federal government to support basic research.

The concluding chapter sets forth five policy recommendations that build on areas of consensus in the three administrations and address emerging issues.

Claude E. Barfield is a resident scholar at AEI and served as costaff director of the President's Commission for a National Agenda for the Eighties from 1979 to 1981.

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