Winter 2010, No. 15

In our cover story, Kevin Carey, an analyst at the think-tank Education Sector, explains that quality, not just access, is a pressing issue in American higher education, driven by a skewed ranking system that prioritizes lavish budgets and higher tuition rates over student aptitude. The answer, he writes, lies in bringing objective data to education “consumers,” no easy task in the face of an entrenched and surprisingly powerful higher ed lobby.

In foreign policy, Shadi Hamid examines the role that a more democratic Egypt can play in Middle East peace, if President Obama can just reorient his approach to the country. Peter Edelman presents a new agenda for the inner city, Greg Anrig offers a novel solution to the state budget crisis, and veteran Ted Kennedy watcher Thomas Oliphant gives his unique take on the Senate’s late Liberal Lion.

Back Issues Archive

Features

That Old College Lie

Are our colleges teaching students well? No. But here's how to make them.

By Kevin Carey

26 MIN READ

The Cairo Conundrum

Egypt is the linchpin to America's Middle East policy—a policy that must make interests reinforce ideals, rather than conflict with them.

By Shadi Hamid

23 MIN READ

Federalism and Its Discontents

The states are drowning. The best life-preserver that Washington can throw at them is to take over Medicaid.

By Greg Anrig

25 MIN READ

The Next War on Poverty

Conventional wisdom aside, some '60s-era inner-city programs have been a success. Now it's time for Obama to launch phase two.

By Peter Edelman

25 MIN READ

Book Reviews

Clinton's Foundations

Bill Clinton acted on principle far more often than you may think.

By Matthew Cooper

17 MIN READ

Out of the Rubble

Do we create more caring communities in the wake of natural catastrophes? Depends on what "we" you mean.

By Amy Wilentz

18 MIN READ

Everyday Heroes

What Pat Tillman's story tells us about modern military heroism.

By John A. Nagl

15 MIN READ

The Lion at Rest

Ted Kennedy's greatness lay in his surprisingly rigorous self-awareness.

By Thomas Oliphant

16 MIN READ

In Galt They Trust

Ayn Rand hated both God and Ronald Reagan. Something to consider for the Tea Partiers. After all, she'd hate them, too.

By Ed Kilgore

14 MIN READ

Responses

The Courage of Our Contradictions

A new liberalism must reflect not only on our permanent beliefs, but also on many Americans' reservations about them. A response to E.J. Dionne, Jr.

By William Galston

16 MIN READ

Recounting

German Lessons

Should progressives frustrated with our democracy pine for a parliamentary system? In a word—nein.

By Clay Risen

11 MIN READ

Editor's Note

Editor's Note

Michael Tomasky introduces Issue #15.

By Michael Tomasky

3 MIN READ

Back Issues Archive