Government Executive : Vol. 41 No. 13 (11/1/09)
FEATURES
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Competing Objectives
The White House's ambitious agenda is running head on into its desire to cut contracting. Something has to give.
By Robert Brodsky -
Recovery Mode
Recovery Board Chairman Earl Devaney and his team had to find an accurate and public way to account for stimulus spending-and quickly.
By Aliya Sternstein -
Warming Trend
Carol Waller Pope ushers in a new era in federal labor relations.
By Alyssa Rosenberg
NEWS+ANALYSIS
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Power Hour
President Obama's energy plans depend on tapping the country's sun-drenched, windswept public lands. By Katherine McIntire Peters -
Fueling Fundraising
The CFC seeks to motivate young workers to contribute time and money to charitable causes. By Emily Long -
Sounding the Alarm
Advocates seek better protections for State Department contractors who report violations in contingency zones.By Elizabeth Newell
ADVICE+DISSENT
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Managing Technology
Outbreak
Agencies lag at telework, but could H1N1 be the catalyst for change? By Carolyn Duffy Marsan -
Management Matters
The Best and The Brightest
Should top leaders seek innovation from the front lines? By Brian Friel -
Intelligence File
Lost Generation
Young CIA employees learn a lesson about scandal.By Shane Harris -
Viewpoint
The Right Path
The military serves as a model for developing senior executive leadership. By Max Stier -
Viewpoint
Blueprint for Disaster
When Washington designs policies that can't work, the results are grim. By William D. Eggers and John O'Leary
IN EVERY ISSUE
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Editor's Notebook
The government's chief performance officer bets on substance over style. By Tom Shoop -
Briefing
Green scene, double duty, viral video and seeing stars. -
Perspectives
Are federal executives as good as a new survey suggests? By Timothy B. Clark
NEXT STORY: Restoring Hope