Government Executive Vol. 38 No.6
FEATURES
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Tangled Lines of Business
The administration's plan to consolidate technology is tied up in its own contradictions.
By David Perera -
Dodging Disaster
Worried about your agency's ability to handle massive disruption during a crisis? Take a lesson from the Minerals Management Service.
By Katherine McIntire Peters -
Fake Busters
Federal agencies, local police and industry are teaming up to stop the sale of counterfeit goods.
By Kimberly Palmer -
Fear Factor
The Energy Department has to figure out how to reassure Americans before it rolls 77,000 tons of nuclear waste across the country.
By Beth Dickey
NEWS+ANALYSIS
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Contracting 101
A class dispenses advice about life for people hoping to sell to the government. By Kimberly Palmer -
Maverick Moves On
Pentagon whistleblower Ernie Fitzgerald hangs up his spurs after a career of fighting government waste. By Jason Vest -
Exporting E-Junk
Discarded government computers land in countries looking for high-tech hand-me-downs. By Beth Dickey -
Leadership Profile
Pat the Builder
Patrick F. Kennedy aims to manage the cantankerous intelligence community. By Shane Harris
ADVICE+DISSENT
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Managing Technology
Rules of the Road
The IRS wants to modernize how it works along with the tools it uses. By David Perera -
Management Matters
As the Wall Crumbles
Intelligence and law enforcement agencies topple the information barrier. By Brian Friel
IN EVERY ISSUE
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Editor's Notebook
We seek to nurture the community of senior federal officials in print, in person and online. - Letters
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The Buzz
Safeguarding grizzly bears, buying American, Dirk Kempthorne on the hot seat and revisiting the McCarthy hearings. -
Outlook
Forget a larger federal workforce-agencies can barely hire the employees they need to oversee contractors. By Tom Shoop
NEXT STORY: Government Executive Vol. 38 No.5