Government Executive : Vol. 39 No. 18 (11/1/07)
By
November 1, 2007
FEATURES
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Insider Threat
Controlling who gains access to what on computer networks is vitally important and devilishly hard. Success stories can help.
By Jill R. Aitoro
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It's a Dirty Job
But someone has to run the General Services Administration.
By Robert Brodsky
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The Closer
Prakash Khatri is pushing to patch an immigration leak he fears terrorists will sneak through.
By Elizabeth Newell
NEWS+ANALYSIS
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Erasing IEDs
The Office of Bombing Prevention does not cut red and green wires, but it tries to cut red tape for those who do. By Zack Phillips
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Rising Expectations
The start of a new union at GAO could change the labor landscape for white-collar feds. By Brittany Ballenstedt
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Tough Talk
Campaign promises to shake up contracting and the federal workforce are short on details. By Robert Brodsky
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Displaced and Unwelcome
The Iraqi refugee crisis threatens Middle East stability and sullies America's image abroad.By Katherine McIntire Peters
ADVICE+DISSENT
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Managing Technology
Greening Your IT Shop
Pressure to reduce data center energy consumption is mounting. Here's how to start. By Andrew Noyes
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Management Matters
Gen X Execs
The next generation of federal executives has begun its ascent. By Brian Friel
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Intelligence File
iTunes and Intelligence
What spies can learn from the music business. By Shane Harris
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Political World
Scandal Politics
Are lawmakers better at dishing out accountability than taking it? By Brian Friel
IN EVERY ISSUE
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Editor's Notebook
Are subsidies really required to get the workforce we need?
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The Buzz
Gaining leadership abilities, old newbies, ruff going and short-staffed in Iraq.
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Outlook
There are some silver linings in recent reports of federal employee misbehavior. By Tom Shoop
Back Issues
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November 1, 2007
http://www.govexec.com/magazine/2007/11/government-executive-vol-39-no-18-11107/25624/