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When California System-Analyzed the Welfare Problem

  • Ida R. Hoos
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Information Technology in a Democracy
This chapter is in the book Information Technology in a Democracy

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Preface v
  3. Contents vii
  4. Prologue: Of Technological Visions and Democratic Politics 1
  5. I. Descriptions of the Developing Systems by Their Advocates
  6. Introduction 15
  7. A. The Databank and Information Systems Route
  8. Detroit’s Social Data Bank 30
  9. The “Logic” Information System 35
  10. The New York State Identification and Intelligence System 40
  11. The United Planning Organization’s Social Databank 47
  12. B. The Management Science Route
  13. PPB and Vietnam 55
  14. PPB in New York State 59
  15. PPB in Cities 63
  16. Program Budgeting for the State Department 69
  17. Systems Analysis in East Lansing 76
  18. Systems Analysis in the Pentagon 81
  19. Putting Operations Research to Work 86
  20. The Systems Approach to Social Problems 93
  21. Congress Needs the Systems Approach 99
  22. System Development Corporation 105
  23. TRW (Thompson-Ramo-Wooldridge) Systems 126
  24. The RAND Projects in New York City 131
  25. California Hires the Aerospace Companies 139
  26. II. “Control Technology” in a Democracy: The Broad Socio-Political Debate
  27. Introduction 149
  28. How Technology Will Shape the Future 152
  29. Moving into a Technetronic Society 161
  30. The Great Refusal of Technetronic Society 168
  31. Technology’s Uninvited Guests 175
  32. Policy Problems of a Data-Rich Civilization 187
  33. Humanizing a Technological Society 198
  34. The Need for New Constitutional Controls 207
  35. Computing Power in Real Time 214
  36. A Public Philosophy for Real Time Information Systems 222
  37. III. The Information Function in Organizational Decision-Making
  38. Introduction 239
  39. Information Systems and Social Knowledge 241
  40. A Bull’s Eye View of Information Systems 250
  41. Management Misinformation Systems 264
  42. Distinguishing Statistical and Intelligence Systems 272
  43. The Road from Information to Knowledge 277
  44. IV. Emerging Information Systems: The Policy Debates
  45. Introduction 289
  46. A. Databanks
  47. Democratic Participation and Technological Planning 291
  48. Civil Liberties Issues in Public Databanks 301
  49. The Political Payoffs in Urban Information Systems 311
  50. Why There Are No Urban Information Systems Yet 322
  51. A Model for Urban Information Systems 328
  52. Trends and Directions for Urban Information Systems 336
  53. B. Management Science Techniques
  54. The New Systems Budgeting 357
  55. PPB for Police Forces 375
  56. PPB and the Complexities of Foreign Affairs 383
  57. Two-and-a-Half Cheers for Systems Analysis 395
  58. When California System-Analyzed the Welfare Problem 409
  59. Systems of Power and the Power of Systems 419
  60. Defense Systems Approaches in the Civil Sector 432
  61. Systems Experts: Foxes in the Henhouse 444
  62. The Cities Can’t Pay for Aerospace Work 451
  63. Systems Analysis and the Liberal Establishment 456
  64. Bibliography Index
  65. Bibliography 463
  66. Index 483
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