The Public Interest
Template:Short description Template:About Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox magazineThe Public Interest (1965–2005) was a quarterly public policy journal founded by Daniel Bell and Irving Kristol, members of the loose New York intellectuals group, in 1965.<ref name=forty>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name="peele">Gillian Peele, "American Conservatism in Historical Perspective", in Crisis of Conservatism? The Republican Party, the Conservative Movement, & American Politics After Bush, Gillian Peele, Joel D. Aberbach (eds.), Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011, p. 26</ref> It was a leading neoconservative journal on political economy and culture, aimed at a readership of journalists, scholars and policy makers.<ref name="peele" />
Overview
Its content included the performance of the Great Society, the fate of social security, the character of Generation X, crime and punishment, love and courtship, the culture wars, the tax wars, the state of the underclass, and the salaries of the overclass. It eschewed foreign and defense policy.<ref name="foreign">Template:Cite book</ref>
The magazine published prominent writers and scholars including Seymour Martin Lipset, James Q. Wilson, Peter Drucker, Charles Murray, James S. Coleman,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Anthony Downs, Aaron Wildavsky, Mancur Olson, Jr., Michael Novak, Samuel P. Huntington, Gertrude Himmelfarb, Martin Feldstein, Leon Kass, Irwin M. Stelzer, Daniel P. Moynihan, Nathan Glazer, Glenn C. Loury, Stephan Thernstrom, Abigail Thernstrom, Charles Krauthammer, Francis Fukuyama and David Brooks.
Editor Irving Kristol was the dominant personality, especially after Daniel Bell relocated to Harvard in 1969. Bell, troubled by what he perceived to be an excessively conservative slant, withdrew in 1973, and was replaced as co-editor by the sociologist Nathan Glazer. Kristol continued, and the magazine become known as the principal house organ of neoconservatism, a hostile label which Kristol embraced.<ref name="neocon">Template:Cite magazine</ref> The magazine's sub-editors were considered apprentices, and were seeded into high journalism, academia, and government staff posts. Many policies advanced by the magazine were absorbed into the mainstream of public policy.Template:Citation needed
In 1988, the journal moved its offices from New York City to Washington, D.C.<ref name=Skinner>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> With foundation support flagging, Kristol aging, and no obvious successor, The Public Interest published its final issue in the spring of 2005. Towards the end, its readership had declined significantly. Kristol wrote on the history of the journal in his article "Forty Good Years" in the final issue.<ref name=forty />
See also
References
External links
- Conservative magazines published in the United States
- Defunct political magazines published in the United States
- Magazines established in 1965
- Magazines disestablished in 2005
- Magazines published in New York City
- Magazines published in Washington, D.C.
- Neoconservatism
- Quarterly magazines published in the United States