Published December 1, 2010
| Version v1
Journal article
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The Future of National Service
Creators
Description
Passage of the Serve America Act in 2009, reauthorizing
the nation's national and community service programs,
represented an important milestone. It was the fi rst
time these programs and its parent government agency,
the U.S. Corporation for National and Community
Service, were reauthorized by Congress since the early
1990s. While advocates of national and community
service have hailed the passage of this bill as evidence
that these initiatives work and will play an increasingly
important policy role, this level of enthusiasm is not well
founded. Th e role that national and community service
will play in public policy in the future is, at best, apt to
be a modest one. Th e authors argue that national and
community service will continue to underachieve and fall
short of the claims made by advocates until it can gain
true bipartisan support, clearly defi ne program goals, and
produce rigorous empirical evidence demonstrating the
impact of these programs.
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