343 Pages
by
Routledge
344 Pages
by
Routledge
332 Pages
by
Routledge
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The National Political Science Review is the official publication of the National Conference of Black Political Scientists. This series, now entering its sixth volume, includes significant scholarly research reflecting the diverse interests of scholars from various backgrounds who use different models, approaches, and methodologies. The central focus is on politics and policies that advantage or... Read more
1: Editor’s Introductory Note; Symposium: Race and Representation; 2: Voting Rights Policy and Redistricting: An Introductory Essay; 3: The 1990s Round of Redistricting: A Schematic Outline of Some Key Features; 4: Minority Representation and the Tradeoffs in Legislative Redistricting; 5: The Impact of Redistricting on African-American Representation in the U.S. Congress and State Legislatures in the 1990s; 6: Redistricting the Commonwealth: ANarrative and Analysis of the Virginia Outcome, 1991–1996; 7: New York City Redistricting and New York State Congressional Redistricting: A View from the Inside; 8: Georgia’s Reapportionment and Redistricting Process in 1995: Reflections of a Participant Observer; 9: Social Movement Theory in the Examination of Mobilization in a Black Community: The 1991 Sacramento Redistricting Project; 10: The Voting Rights Act and Judicial Elections: A Horse of a Different Color or Canary in the Coal Mine?; 11: Redistricting in the Multiracial Twenty-First Century: Changing Demographic and Socioeconomic Conditions Pose Important New Challenges; 12: Race and Representation: A Commentary; Call and Response: The Politics of Speaking to and for Black America; 13: The Messages and the Messengers: Opinions from the Million Men Who Marched; Progress and Resistance; 14: Two Paths to Minority Empowerment; 15: Limited and Cumulative Voting in Alabama: An Assessment After Two Rounds of Elections; 16: Fiscal Neglect as a Response to School Desegregation: Defunding Desegregated Schools; The Political Science Discipline: Constraints and Concerns; 17: - The Limits of Rational Choice Theory; 18: The Study of African-American Politics as Social Danger: Clues from the Disciplinary Journals; Reflection; 19: Civil Rights Policy and the Liberal Tradition: A Framework for Evaluating Social Policy; Research; 20: Separate and Unequal: Incorporation, Stratification, and Reform; 21: The Political Behavior of American Blacks: A Research Note on Effects of Four Classes of Variables; 22: Early Post-Cold War Views of World Affairs; 23: The Devolution Decade: Assessing the States’ Response; 24: Reform, Re-Invention, and Good Governance: Politics, the Public Service, and Public Accountability; 25: The Preeminent African-American Legal Scholar: J. Clay Smith, Jr.; Book Reviews; 27: Invitation to the Scholarly Community
Biography
Georgia A. Persons






