27 research outputs found

    Is American Public Administration Detached From Historical Context?: On the Nature of Time and the Need to Understand It in Government and Its Study

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    The study of public administration pays little attention to history. Most publications are focused on current problems (the present) and desired solutions (the future) and are concerned mainly with organizational structure (a substantive issue) and output targets (an aggregative issue that involves measures of both individual performance and organizational productivity/services). There is much less consideration of how public administration (i.e., organization, policy, the study, etc.) unfolds over time. History, and so administrative history, is regarded as a “past” that can be recorded for its own sake but has little relevance to contemporary challenges. This view of history is the product of a diminished and anemic sense of time, resulting from organizing the past as a series of events that inexorably lead up to the present in a linear fashion. To improve the understanding of government’s role and position in society, public administration scholarship needs to reacquaint itself with the nature of time.Yeshttps://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/manuscript-submission-guideline

    Persistent and reversible morphine withdrawal-induced morphological changes in the nucleus accumbens

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    Morphine withdrawal produces a hypofunction of mesencephalic dopamine (DA) neurons which impinge upon medium spiny neurons (MSN) of the forebrain. After chronic treatment rats were either spontaneously or pharmacologically withdrawn from chronic morphine: under these two distinct conditions we studied the effects of withdrawal on spine density of MSN of the core and shell of the nucleus accumbens (NAcc) at various times (1-3-7-14 days). MSN were stained with the Golgi-Cox procedure and analyzed by a confocal laser-scanning microscope. Our analysis shows that both spontaneous and naloxone-induced withdrawal produces a long-lasting but reversible reduction in spines' density in shell MSN, as compared with core MSN. This effect is selectively localized at the level of second-order dendritic trunks and persists up to 14 days when spine density was found within control (pretreatment) values. By contrast, spine density counts of NAcc MSN from rats chronically treated with morphine, did not reveal any change over time. Collectively, the results of the present article suggest that spontaneous and pharmacologically precipitated withdrawal, but not chronic morphine, persistently but reversibly reduce spines' density under a condition of reduced mesolimbic DA transmission, and the reduction of spines' density in second-order dendritic trunks is selectively segregated in the MSN of the shell of the NAcc. Morphine withdrawal dramatically, lastingly, and reversibly reduces spine density, selectively in second-order dendritic trunks of NAcc shell MSN, thereby further impoverishing the already abated DA transmission. These results may be relevant in the most harmful consequences of drug addiction such as craving and loss of control over intake and are in line with recent views suggesting the hypodopaminergic state as a cardinal feature of drug dependence
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