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Liberal Democracy and Policy‐Making: Knowledge and the Formation of Social Policy
In: In The Name of Liberalism, S. 28-48
‘They Have Been Given a Chance’: The US Civilian Conservation Corps
In: In The Name of Liberalism, S. 180-216
‘The Gravest Menace?’ American Immigration Policy
In: In The Name of Liberalism, S. 97-133
Liberalism and Illiberal Social Policy
In: In The Name of Liberalism, S. 7-27
‘Aroused Like One from Sleep’: From New Poor Law to Contractual Workfare
In: In The Name of Liberalism, S. 226-257
‘A Second Chance, not a Way of Life’: Welfare as Workfare in the USA
In: In The Name of Liberalism, S. 258-286
The Politics of Social Research: Institutionalizing Public Funding Regimes in the United States and Britain
In: British journal of political science, Band 28, Heft 3, S. 415-444
ISSN: 1469-2112
In the twenty years after 1945 both the United States and Britain created public funding regimes for social science, through the National Science Foundation (NSF) and the Social Science Research Council (SSRC) respectively. The historical and political contexts in which these institutions were founded differed, but the assumptions about social science concurred. This article uses archival sources to explain this comparative pattern. It is argued that the political context in both countries played a key role in the development of the two research agencies. In each country the need politically to stress the neutrality of social research – though for different reasons in each case – produced a bias towards positivist scientific methodology, untempered by ideology. This propensity created the trajectory upon which each country's public funding regime rests.
The Politics of Social Research: Institutionalizing Public Funding Regimes in the United States and Britain
In: British Journal of Political Science, Band 28, Heft 3, S. 415-444
Poverty, Inequality, and the Future of Social Policy: Western States in the New World Order. Edited by Katherine McFate, Roger Lawson, and William Julius Wilson. New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 1995. 723p. $70.00
In: American political science review, Band 91, Heft 2, S. 485-486
ISSN: 1537-5943
The Politics of Segregation in Post‐Reconstruction America
In: Separate and Unequal, S. 3-36
Working in a Federal Agency: Social Ostracism and Discrimination
In: Separate and Unequal, S. 72-108