Government Executive : Vol. 39 No. 20 (11/15/07)

magazine cover image

FEATURES

  • Staying On Track
    Keeping tabs on foreign visitors as they arrive has been a surprising information technology success. Noting their departure promises to be much harder.
    By Zack Phillips
  • The Good Fight
    Dispatches from opposite sides of the debate about religion in the workplace.
    By Alyssa Rosenberg
  • Desperate For Money
    The Air Force pleads for modernization funds
    By Greg Grant

NEWS+ANALYSIS

  • Cobbled Together In Crisis
    Federal Executive Boards try to coordinate emergency response with patchwork of staffing and funding. By Alyssa Rosenberg
  • Chain Reaction
    Coming nuke power boom bodes licensing pileup at Nuclear Regulatory Commission. By Katherine McIntire Peters
  • Between a Rock And a Hard Place
    A nation of immigrants is finding it hard to also be a nation of laws. By Katherine McIntire Peters

ADVICE+DISSENT

  • Managing Technology

    Pipe Dream
    Network managers want more bandwidth, but streamlining data is the answer for now. By Jill R. Aitoro
  • Management Matters

    The Benefits of Benefits
    The extras are nice, but maybe federal agencies should focus on what really attracts talent. By Brian Friel
  • Federal Marketplace

    Real-Time Buying
    Agencies work to link procurement with their financial and business systems. By Elizabeth Newell
  • Intelligence File

    Principle and Peril
    In his brief government career, Jack Goldsmith walked a precarious yet well-worn path. By Shane Harris

IN EVERY ISSUE

  • Editor's Notebook
    The Air Force and the rest of government face budget woes.
  • Letters
  • The Buzz
    A new immigration video game, security guards for diplomats and an excerpt on war

Back Issues

NEXT STORY: Winnowing Weak Applications