Everyone engaged in any way in the Washington battles of higher education will want this map of the terrain, locating as it does both the institutional combatants and the issues. Through a convincing and fascinating analysis of recent history, Professor Cook also provides clear, concise, balanced, and compelling judgments that will be of critical importance to everyone touched by federal higher education policy.
--Sheldon Hackney, former president of Tulane University and the University of Pennsylvania, and former chairman of NEH
An important antidote to the increasingly cynical view of Washington and a must-read for current and aspiring college presidents, deans, and other administrative and student leaders. Cook details the remarkable story of how the higher education community, believing in the rightness of their cause, drastically changed their modus operandi and prevailed in the most serious battle in decades over federal support of higher education.
--Nan Shelby Wells, Director of Government Affairs, Princeton University
Lobbying for Higher Education is the finest study we have of coalition formation among Washington lobbies and the best book we have on the interest group politics surrounding policymaking for colleges and universities.
--Jeffrey M. Berry, author of The Interest Group Society and Lobbying for the People
A superior book, well grounded in the relevant literature, that offers consistently balanced, informed, and perceptive judgments.
--Hugh Davis Graham, author of The Rise of American Research Universities
Outstanding. Cook's use and interpretation of interview and survey data are superb. The book will command the attention of all of the major stakeholders in the relationship between higher education and the federal government.
--Harland G. Bloland, author of Associations in Action: The Washington Higher Education Community
The first in a new series from Vanderbilt, this volume details how the world of higher education attempts to get its fair share of the federal education dollar. Cook (education, Univ. of Michigan) explains the workings of the Big Sixa group of major associations that serve as the principal voices of higher education. Higher education once distanced itself from lobbying, feeling it was somewhat above begging for money. But times have changed, and colleges and universities now realize how crucial it is to make their presence known in Washington. Cook describes how the Big Six work, often amid controversies and conflicts, and highlights how the makeup of the 104th Congress elected in 1994 created new problems for education lobbyists. Cook's work is very detailed and well written and will be of interest to those involved in higher education. For academic and larger public libraries.Terry A. Christner, Hutchinson P.L., KS