Social Science Quarterly, Volume 66Southwestern Social Science Association and the University of Texas, 1985 - Political science Includes section "Book reviews." |
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Page 571
... less likely to withstand a hur- ricane ; lower - class residents are less likely to have adequate insurance protection , or to possess adequate financial resources so as to be able to rebuild or escape from the scene . At the same time ...
... less likely to withstand a hur- ricane ; lower - class residents are less likely to have adequate insurance protection , or to possess adequate financial resources so as to be able to rebuild or escape from the scene . At the same time ...
Page 797
... less frequently significant on LCCR than CC votes . The models can explain from 13 to 44 percent of the variance for Democrats . Generally the models are less successful in explaining the vari- ance of Democrats ' voting behavior than ...
... less frequently significant on LCCR than CC votes . The models can explain from 13 to 44 percent of the variance for Democrats . Generally the models are less successful in explaining the vari- ance of Democrats ' voting behavior than ...
Page 917
... less cyclically sensitive intra - industry unemployment rates and not by their disproportionate concentration in less sensitive industries . Methodology and Data In order to isolate the effect of distribution by industry on the ...
... less cyclically sensitive intra - industry unemployment rates and not by their disproportionate concentration in less sensitive industries . Methodology and Data In order to isolate the effect of distribution by industry on the ...
Contents
Metropolitan Development and the Changing Journey to Work | 519 |
An Empirical | 533 |
The Regulatory Policy Cycle and the Airline Deregulation Movement | 552 |
Copyright | |
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analysis Anglo areas average behavior candidates Census central city characteristics Chicago Chicago Heights coefficients comparable worth competition consumer correlation differences differential disaster discrimination distribution districts earnings economic effect efficacy election electoral elite equation ethnicity factors Gini coefficient groups human capital hypothesis impact income increase independent variables individuals industry inequality issues Journal labor force labor force participation labor market legislators less Love Canal male marital measure metropolitan Mexican American mobility nations neighborhood occupations percent percentage perspective Political Science population positions prestige problems programs Quarterly ratio regression relationship residents response Review runoffs Sabetti sample science journals scores sector significant Social Science social security socioeconomic Sociology SSQ REFERENCES statistical status structure suburbs suggest Susan WELCH Table theory tion unemployment rate University of Texas urban variables veterans voting wage women workers York