Social Science Quarterly, Volume 70Southwestern Social Science Association and the University of Texas, 1989 - Political science Includes section "Book reviews." |
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Page 595
... greater famil- iarity with the dominant culture and greater socioeconomic success allow immigrants to gain an accurate and realistic understanding of inequality and the practice of discrimination in U.S. society as they compete with ...
... greater famil- iarity with the dominant culture and greater socioeconomic success allow immigrants to gain an accurate and realistic understanding of inequality and the practice of discrimination in U.S. society as they compete with ...
Page 611
... greater acceptance among groups or simply greater unwillingness to express strongly negative opinions in survey settings is difficult to determine . Yet while the absolute levels of acceptance seem not to show great hos- tility between ...
... greater acceptance among groups or simply greater unwillingness to express strongly negative opinions in survey settings is difficult to determine . Yet while the absolute levels of acceptance seem not to show great hos- tility between ...
Page 866
... greater bequests , or have larger capital stocks , thus offsetting the service burden of the debt . We have observed that in reality the tax cuts of the 1980s did not translate to higher savings and greater investment . Instead , as ...
... greater bequests , or have larger capital stocks , thus offsetting the service burden of the debt . We have observed that in reality the tax cuts of the 1980s did not translate to higher savings and greater investment . Instead , as ...
Contents
Gender Role Stereotypes and Attitudes | 579 |
Discrimination and the Assimilation and Ethnic Competition Perspectives | 594 |
Some | 607 |
Copyright | |
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abortion action affirmative action analysis Anglo areas armed forces assimilation associated behavior benefits California CALIFORNIA/SANTA CRUZ Census cheating conscription costs countries crime CRUZ The University differences discretion discrimination divorce economic effect elite environmental estimate ethnic factors female freedom groups growth Hispanic human rights impact income increase industry institutional interest issues Journal labor legislators male marriage measure ment mental health Mexican Americans mortality negative liberty nuclear occupations Office organization participation patterns percent black persons Political Science population positive positive liberty prohibition racial racial integration rates ratio relative Rent Seeking reported response Review role sample sector significant Social Science Quarterly Sociology Spanish surname statistical status suggest Table Texas Press theory Three Mile Island tion U.S. Bureau U.S. Congress UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA/SANTA University of Texas University Press utilization variables women workers