As people of diverse origins seek their rights as citizens in the great American melting pot, the differences between us are sometimes celebrated but more often cursed. White Americans, too often forgetful of their own immigrant backgrounds, question whether initiatives like affirmative action that extend privileges to minorities violate the principle of equal treatment under the law.
In this provocative book, David Ingram brings a variety of current social dilemmas together in a mutually illuminating way. He examines the concept of legal equality in a multiracial society by considering issues such as self-governance for Native Americans, the rights of immigrants, affirmative action, racial redistricting, and multicultural curricular reform. He also tackles the problem of social injustice in a global setting by assessing the negative impact of free trade policies on the rights of groups to subsistence, self-determination, and cultural integrity.
Ingram steeps his presentation in theoretical discussions that investigate group versus individual rights, oppressed groups and social injustice, and the legitimacy of racial and cultural distinctions. He explores the legal treatment of difference to show how democratic institutions unintentionally perpetuate racial inequality and to determine how those institutions might be better structured to protect minorities.
Taking in a broad sweep of economics, politics, and anthropology, Ingram examines social ideals in the light of historical facts in order to lend a concrete perspective to possibilities for reform. He makes a persuasive case for redressing wrongs of the past in a way that adheres to the principle of legal equality—arguing that initiatives like affirmative active are not reverse discrimination but satisfy the constitutional guarantee of equal protection—and he suggests that libertarians need to acknowledge duties as much as they do rights.
Group Rights is a new primer on the meaning of American citizenship. It makes a vital contribution to critical social theory, bringing complex philosophical concepts into sharp focus and elaborating the histories by which moral and political principles are interpreted. A challenging sourcebook for students and concerned citizens, it clarifies these important issues and points the way toward a political reconciliation between equality and difference in the new global society.
本书对美国无论是公营部门还是私营公司十分严重的官僚主义现象,开出了十种“药方”,而作者提出最主要的办法就是用“企业家精神”来克服官僚主义,即政府要讲究实效,按效 ...
以恐懼領導的人,才要求個人的忠誠。 《紐約時報》暢銷第一名! 亞馬遜書店暢銷第一名! 我信仰法治 也相信全國沒有半個人可以不受法律管轄 ...
This project examined the extent of cross-leveling during Desert Shield and Desert Storm, the reasons for it, the likelihood of serious personnel shortfalls in future deployments, and, based on these findings, the types of policies that ...
As I wrote in a recent tribute to Justice Marshall: There appears to be a deliberate retrenchment by a majority of the current Supreme Court on many basic issues of human rights that Thurgood Marshall advocated and that the Warren and ...
Washington, D.C. Uslaner, Eric M. 1993. The Decline of Comity in Congress. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. Valelly, Richard M. 1996. “Couch-potato Democracy?” American Prospect 25: 25–26. Valentino, N. A. 1999.
Since 1937 , and especially since 1954 , as a result of the Warren Court's active defense of individual liberties , liberals insist that in Supreme Court rachels CHAPTER 19 The Judges 465 protecting fundamental constitutional guarantees ...
The author takes note of the serious side of elections even as he documents the frenzy and frolic.
The Council's Independent Task Force on Public Diplomacy was formed to devise fresh and creative responses to a problem that has too often received short shrift by the U.S. government.
And how did the public hear what he said, especially as it was filtered through the news media? The eloquent and thoughtful Bush's War shows how public perception of what the president says is shaped by media bias.
Abramson , Paul R. , and John H. Aldrich . 1982. “ The Decline of Electoral Participation in America . ” American Political Science Review 76 : 502–21 . Adams , William C. 1984. “ Media Coverage of Campaign '84 : A Preliminary Report .