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Private Illness and Public Policy: The Cases of James Forrestal and John Winant
ARNOLD A. ROGOW
Am J Psychiatry 1969;125:1093-1098.
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Graduate professor of political science, City University of New York Graduate Center, 33 West 42nd St., New York, N. Y. 10036
1968-69, American Psychiatric Association
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Abstract
The illnesses and suicides of James Forrestal and John Winant are examined for their possible relevance to problems of stress and breakdown in political decision-making areas. The depressions of Forrestal and Winant are related to their personal lives and political careers. The author argues that some of their personal problems found expression in their careers but that the serious consequences of these problems for policy decisions were checked by a variety of restrictions on office holding in American government. Much more research is needed, however, to determine what might be done to prevent mental illness and breakdown in high office.Abstract Teaser
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