Government Executive
January 1, 2006
SPECIAL SECTION Redefining National Security Ill winds have knocked national security agencies off balance. By Katherine McIntire Peters Building Stability Increasingly, national security depends on beefing up America's ability to rebuild nations. By Katherine McIntire Peters Thin Ranks We lack enough spies in the right places, and intelligence reform isn't producing them. By Jason Vest Swarming Information To net terrorists, abandon bureaucracy. By Justin Rood Hanging Together Whistleblowers hook up and use technology to protect themselves and amplify their effect. By Chris Strohm FEATURES Paybanding Pitfalls Agencies buying into the compensation craze could run into roadblocks. By Karen Rutzick Buy American Tattered by exemptions, the 1933 law designed to protect U.S. jobs is nearly impossible to enforce. By Kimberly Palmer NEWS+ANALYSIS Mending Medicare CMS' physician reimbursement system is ailing, but many fear the cure could hurt patients. By David Perera Being Green Legislation pushes more efficient federal buildings - and industry is ready to help. By Kimberly Palmer Stake Your Claim Real estate speculators set their sights on lunar homesteads. By Beth Dickey ADVICE+DISSENT Managing Technology Damage Control Early warning system for troubled IT projects isn't tamper-proof. By David Perera Management Matters Tricky Business Corporate executives might have a lot to learn from government leaders. By Brian Friel Viewpoint Tracking Technology Agencies need to get a handle on measuring IT effectiveness. By Robert Handler Political World A Salute to the Hawk John Murtha's stand redefines the debate over the Iraq war. By Charles Mahtesian IN EVERY ISSUE Editor's Notebook Agencies slowly embrace new missions and strategies. Letters The Buzz Stamping out a New Year, the Army's AC/DC tribute and a BlackBerry scare. Outlook Program managers are forced to work in a system that almost guarantees failure. By Tom Shoop Back Issues
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