Since the end of the civil rights era in the sixties it has become increasingly clear that social and political conflicts cannot be resolved entirely at the national level. Struggles between residents of poor neighborhoods and local interest groups or public authorities present some of our most explosive domestic political problems today. This study seeks insight into these problems through an analysis of efforts during the sixties to organize the poor to pursue their interests in local decision-making processes.
David J. O'Brien holds that both organizers and scholarly observers of...
Since the end of the civil rights era in the sixties it has become increasingly clear that social and political conflicts cannot be resolved entire...
Since the end of the civil rights era in the sixties it has become increasingly clear that social and political conflicts cannot be resolved entirely at the national level. Struggles between residents of poor neighborhoods and local interest groups or public authorities present some of our most explosive domestic political problems today. This study seeks insight into these problems through an analysis of efforts during the sixties to organize the poor to pursue their interests in local decision-making processes.
David J. O'Brien holds that both organizers and scholarly observers of...
Since the end of the civil rights era in the sixties it has become increasingly clear that social and political conflicts cannot be resolved entire...