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Choices about choices
In: Systems research, Band 13, Heft 3, S. 261-270
Voting Choice and Rational Choice
In: Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics
"Voting Choice and Rational Choice" published on by Oxford University Press.
Epistemic choice and public choice
In: Public choice, Band 77, Heft 1, S. 163-176
ISSN: 1573-7101
Epistemic choice and public choice
In: Public choice, Band 77, Heft 1, S. 163-176
ISSN: 0048-5829
Transitional Gender Justice: A Zimbabwean Perspective
In: Quarterly / AFLA, Africa Legal Aid: making human rights a reality, Heft 1, S. 46-48
ISSN: 1384-282X
The Politics of the 2005 Parliamentary Elections in Zimbabwe
In: Journal of African elections, Band 4, Heft 2, S. 74-90
ISSN: 1609-4700
The politics of the 2005 parliamentary elections in Zimbabwe
In: Journal of African elections, Band 4, Heft 2, S. 74-90
ISSN: 1609-4700
World Affairs Online
Hate Speech in Cyberspace: Why Education is Better than Regulation
SSRN
Working paper
Choice or Deferred Choice?
In: Far Eastern affairs: a Russian journal on China, Japan and Asia-Pacific, Band 45, Heft 4, S. 39-45
ISSN: 0206-149X
SSRN
Choice
In: Mark Turner, COGNITIVE DIMENSIONS OF SOCIAL SCIENCE: THE WAY WE THINK ABOUT POLITICS, ECONOMICS, LAW, AND SOCIETY, Oxford University Press, 2001
SSRN
Operation Rescue scrapbook, part IV, 1988
Scrapbook of newsclippings documenting Operation Rescue and related anti-abortion protests and reactions in the Atlanta, Georgia area, as well as national media and political responses. Most articles come from the Atlanta Journal, the Atlanta Constitution, or the Atlanta Journal and Constitution. ; Correspondence and printed material, as well as minutes and agendas, financial records, legal records, photographs, audio-visual records, and artifacts including textiles, 1974-2006 (bulk 1982-2006), document the legislative, organizational, advocacy, and educational work of Georgians for Choice to preserve reproductive choice in the state. Reference material documents legal issues, legislation, and various other organizations representing pro-choice and pro-life viewpoints. The Georgians for Choice records also contain materials relating to the administration, fundraising, and manangement of the coalition-based non-profit. ; Formed in 1986, Georgians for Choice brought together 16 women's organizations in an effort to greater impact the protection and expansion of women's reproductive freedom in Georgia. Over time, Georgians for Choice grew to become to a 45 member coalition. Membership in Georgians for Choice was open to any organization supporting the coalition's mission and goals. Each organization paid a membership fee based on its total budget. However, no organization was denied membership due to an inability to pay dues. Additional financial support for the coalition came from special events, individual donations, organizational donations (special appeals), and foundations. Georgians for Choice strove for diversity in both its membership and leadership, and in its selection of its steering committee, worked to ensure that members represented varied geographic regions and included women of color, organizations of faith, social services, the women's legal community, health care providers, educational organizations, and gay and lesbian organizations. Serving as a clearinghouse for members, Georgians for Choice functioned as a centralized source for media referrals; had a video library on women's reproductive health issues; provided timely information on state and national legislation; provided a quarterly newsletter with state, regional, and national events; provided speakers for panels and forums; monitored clinic violence; provided clinic escorts and training; testified before state legislative committees; and conducted in-district and Washington meetings with members of Congress. GFC invested a great deal of energy in its Candidate Report Card, which provided voters with information on national, statewide, and local candidates for public office and their positions on reproductive rights. It also helped connect women seeking reproductive services to care providers who offered family planning, abortion, pregnancy care, adoption services, and financial assistance. In 2008 Georgians For Choice changed its name to SPARK Reproductive Justice NOW and its mission to "collaborate with individuals and communities to build and sustain a powerful reproductive justice movement in Georgia by developing and sharing a radical analysis in order to shift culture; mobilizing in response to immediate threats and; organizing for long term systemic change." ; Georgia State University provides the http://digitalcollections.library.gsu.edu website as a service to the Georgia State University community and to the public. The views expressed in the content presented here do not necessarily reflect the views of Georgia State University, its students, faculty or staff. Georgia State University did not create and is not responsible for any information contained within the site.
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