New America Policy Papers: 2006

Papers and other formal publications from our policy programs are available below. To jump to another year in the archives, please use the links at right.

A Premium Price

  • By
  • Len Nichols,
  • Peter Harbage,
  • New America Foundation
December 18, 2006

Health insurance is the primary method Californians use to access and pay for health care. However, millions of Californians have inadequate health insurance or lack coverage entirely. When care is needed, the first inclination for these families is to delay treatment that is too costly and then hope for the best. And when hope is not enough, these families are forced to seek treatment that they often cannot afford. When medical bills go unpaid, many health care providers shift the cost onto those who can pay -- the those with health insurance...

Dealing with Tehran

  • By
  • Flynt Leverett,
  • New America Foundation
December 10, 2006

This report by Flynt Leverett, director of New America's Geopolitics of Energy Initiative within the American Strategy Program, was commissioned by The Century Foundation.

The complete document is available via The Century Foundation website at http://www.tcf.org/list.asp?type=PB&pubid=595.

How Research on Family Structure and Children's Development Can Inform Healthy Marriage Practitioners in the Field

  • By
  • Kelleen Kaye,
  • New America Foundation
December 1, 2006

Is children’s development, and children’s cognitive development in particular, affected by the marital status of their parents? On the face of it, this seems to be a simple question to which there is an intuitively simple answer: yes. Yet the answer to this question is anything but simple. The complexity of this question, the policy context that has helped shape a growing body of related research, and the implications of findings for policy and practice are discussed below.

From New England to the Golden Gate Bridge

  • By
  • Cristy Gallagher,
  • New America Foundation
November 20, 2006

Frustrated by the lack of action or even attention at the federal level, states and local governments are looking for creative ways to expand programs to reach the 47 million Americans without health insurance. There have already been a number of creative initiatives by states and localities over the last five years to cover more of the uninsured, which deserve our review.

Automatic Voter Registration

November 10, 2006

The Problem. Recent elections underscore the importance of improving the way we register citizens to vote. Our voter rolls are not complete enough, with nearly a third of eligible Californians -- about 6.7 million people -- not registered, a lower percentage than in 2001.This lack of civic participation is a threat to good governance and a healthy democracy. Current state law limits valuable opportunities for engaging more Californians in the electoral process.

Rethinking Federal Low-Income Housing Policies

  • By F. Stevens Redburn, Fellow, National Academy of Public Administration
November 1, 2006

Federal housing programs are sustained more by inertia and the difficulty of unwinding financial obligations than by a consensus that these policies are effective in helping people. Established rationales have been weakened both by changes in the nature of the housing problems faced by low-income households and by the inability of research to demonstrate that these programs are as cost-effective as alternative means of helping improve the lives of the poor. Setting a new course requires us to rethink housing policy—from its premises on up.

Rebuilding America's Productive Economy

  • By
  • Joel Kotkin,
  • New America Foundation
  • and Delore Zimmerman, President & CEO, Praxis, Inc.
October 30, 2006

From its inception as a nation, America's great advantage over its global rivals has stemmed largely from the successful development of its vast interior. The Heartland has been both the incubator of national identity and an outlet for the entrepreneurial energies of both immigrants and those living in dense urban areas.

Universal Voter Registration

October 30, 2006

California's strength flows from a willingness to innovate and improve upon the American experiment in democracy. Recent elections underscore the importance of revamping the way we register citizens to vote, with the twin goals of registering all eligible voters and decreasing opportunities for voter fraud. Voter rolls should be complete and clean.

Realizing America's Economic Potential

October 30, 2006

Over the past decade and half, two pivotal developments have come together to create the conditions for what could be a new golden era of faster economic growth and rising prosperity. One development involves the technological advancements and other changes associated with the new economy, which have substantially increased U.S. and world productivity growth. The bursting of the tech bubble in 2000 may have put an end to the hype surrounding the new economy.

From TV to Public Safety

  • By Jon M. Peha, Carnegie Mellon University
October 26, 2006

Abstract

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