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It does not seem unreasonable to expect that advanced technology generates certain public needs and requires of those who direct the fulfillment of these needs qualifications and experience making for a certain type and level of professional competence regardless of their ideology. In this comparative study of four European countries, Professors Lammers and Nyomarkay examine the careers of socialist and nonsocialist cabinet ministers between 1900 and 1982 to identify the emerging trend, and the degree of similarity, in their career development.
Current issues are available on the Chicago Journals website: Read the latest issue. Polity is the journal of the Northeastern Political Science Association, published quarterly since 1968. As a general-interest journal, it has always sought to publish work of interest to a broad range of political scientists — work that is lively, provocative, and readable. Polity is devoted to the premise that political knowledge advances through scholarly communication across subdiscipline boundaries.
Since its origins in 1890 as one of the three main divisions of the University of Chicago, The University of Chicago Press has embraced as its mission the obligation to disseminate scholarship of the highest standard and to publish serious works that promote education, foster public understanding, and enrich cultural life. Today, the Journals Division publishes more than 70 journals and hardcover serials, in a wide range of academic disciplines, including the social sciences, the humanities, education, the biological and medical sciences, and the physical sciences.
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Polity