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 580
... relationship was found between priorities and income ( x2 = 15.76 ( 6 df ) , p < .05 ) . No significant correlation was found between priorities and education ( x2 = 2.61 ( 4 df ) , p > .05 ) . Chi - squares were computed for issue ...
... relationship was found between priorities and income ( x2 = 15.76 ( 6 df ) , p < .05 ) . No significant correlation was found between priorities and education ( x2 = 2.61 ( 4 df ) , p > .05 ) . Chi - squares were computed for issue ...
Page 794
... relationship between party and CC voting has not increased , urbanization has become a weaker correlate of voting behavior . In the 89th Congress a 10 percentage point increase in urbanization was associated with a 9 percentage point ...
... relationship between party and CC voting has not increased , urbanization has become a weaker correlate of voting behavior . In the 89th Congress a 10 percentage point increase in urbanization was associated with a 9 percentage point ...
Page 802
... relationship was unanticipated , however , with representatives who had less educated constituents being more liberal . Since this relationship holds on civil rights as well as CC votes , it suggests that racial intolerance is not now ...
... relationship was unanticipated , however , with representatives who had less educated constituents being more liberal . Since this relationship holds on civil rights as well as CC votes , it suggests that racial intolerance is not now ...
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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action analysis areas average candidates characteristics coefficients comparable competition concern consumer correlation decision demand determine differences differential discrimination distribution earnings economic effect election equation experience explain factors female findings greater groups human impact important included income increase indicate individuals industry influence institutional interest issues Journal labor force less major male Marxism mean measure Mexican American noted occupations organizations participation percent period political Political Science population positions present Press problems programs question regression relationship relative reported residents response Review rules sample scores significant Social Science Society Sociology status structure suggest Table Texas theory tion unemployment University urban values variables voting wage women workers York