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POLITICAL SCIENCE QUARTERLY VOL: 126 NO 4 (5) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   111019


America's grace: how a tolerant nation bridges its religious divides / Campbell, David E; Putnam, Robert D   Journal Article
Campbell, David E Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract David E. Campbell and Robert D. Putnam ask how America can simultaneously be religiously devout, religiously diverse, and religiously tolerant. They argue that America's relative religious harmony lies in the frequency of "religious bridging." Almost all Americans have a friend or close family member of another religion, and these personal relationships keep America's religious melting pot from boiling over.
Key Words Religion  America  Religious Divides 
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2
ID:   111018


Democratic divisions in the 1960s and the road to welfare refor / Bertram, Eva   Journal Article
Bertram, Eva Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract Eva Bertram analyzes the effects of welfare reform initiatives undertaken by the Kennedy and Johnson administrations. She argues that liberalizing reforms of the 1960s created opportunities for conservative Democratic lawmakers to seize the policy agenda, laying the groundwork for a turn toward workfare that would culminate in the 1990s.
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3
ID:   111017


Influence of Magna Carta in limiting executive power in the war / Kasper, Eric T   Journal Article
Kasper, Eric T Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract Eric T. Kasper examines the use of Magna Carta by U.S. federal courts in enemy combatant cases. He traces the history of due process, jury trial, and habeas corpus rights within Magna Carta as well as subsequent legal documents and rulings in England and America. He concludes that Magna Carta is properly used by the federal courts as persuasive authority to limit executive power in the war on terror.
Key Words America  War on Terror  England  Magna Carta 
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4
ID:   111020


Peace before freedom: diplomacy and repression in Sadat's Egypt / Brownlee, Jason   Journal Article
Brownlee, Jason Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract Jason Brownlee assesses the foundations of the contemporary U.S.-Egyptian alliance, which was consolidated in 1979 by the Egyptian-Israeli Peace Treaty. He concludes that the bold diplomacy of Egyptian President Anwar Sadat was matched by fierce repression at home. Moreover, Egypt's foreign interlocutors presupposed that authoritarianism inside Egypt would help guarantee the country's new foreign policy alignment.
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5
ID:   111021


Politics of diplomatic service reform in post-Soviet Russia / Biberman, Yelena   Journal Article
Biberman, Yelena Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract Yelena Biberman discusses the causes and implications of the diplomatic drain since the early 1990s-inside the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Drawing on an original survey of students at academic programs in elite Russian universities designed to train diplomats, she challenges the idea that inadequate material benefits limit interest in Russian diplomatic careers. Instead, she demonstrates that concerns over the relative power and prestige of the diplomatic corps guide prospective diplomats in their career choices.
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