Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 November 2022
The Advanced Study Program of the Brookings Institution may be the largest continuing seminar on public policy in the United States, if not the world.
Is the American Constitutional system adequate to the needs of contemporary society?
Is the American system of government dominated by “special interests”?
Do “limits to growth” threaten to bring about increasing conflict among income groups in the United States?
Is the decline in economic productivity a threat to the international security of the United States?
What are the strengths and weaknesses of supply side economics?
What are the implications of the growth of the service economy for the various regions of the United States?
What are the relationships and tradeoffs among energy policy, inflation, environmental objectives, and regulatory policy?
What are the ethical implications of major public policies?
Each year, these and similar questions are explored in the approximately 100 seminars, conferences, and other educational programs conducted by the Advanced Study Program.
* These seminars are described in greater length in Cannon, Mark W. and Cikins, Warren I., “Interbranch Cooperation in Improving the Administration of Justice: A Major Innovation,” Washington and Lee Law Review, Volume 28, No. 1, Winter 1981, pp. 1–20.Google Scholar