Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- A Question of Black Power and Nationalism (1)
- ACLU (1)
- American Civil Liberties Union (1)
- Associational self-help (1)
- Baumol-Olson thesis on public goods (1)
-
- Blue collar (1)
- Charitable deductions (1)
- Fitchburg Massachusetts (1)
- Free choice (1)
- Housewifery (1)
- IUSTITIA (1)
- Mancur Olson (1)
- Matriarchate theory (1)
- Middle class (1)
- Middle class volunteerism (1)
- Myths (1)
- New Incentives for Middle Class Philanthropy (1)
- PIRG (1)
- Poem (1)
- Public interest associations (1)
- Public interest sector (1)
- Radical Funding for the Public Good (1)
- Reponses (1)
- Revenue sharing (1)
- Self-determination (1)
- Social science (1)
- Special Issue by Women (1)
- Stranger in our Midst (1)
- Student Public Interest Research Group (1)
- Study of paradigms (1)
Articles 1 - 6 of 6
Full-Text Articles in Law
New Incentives For Middle Class Philanthropy: Radical Funding For The Public Good, Samuel M. Loescher
New Incentives For Middle Class Philanthropy: Radical Funding For The Public Good, Samuel M. Loescher
IUSTITIA
The recent expansions in membership and budget of the American Civil Liberties Union and, even more dramatically, the explosive funding by mail of newly-founded Common Cause and Public Citizen, all suggest the presence of evolutionary forces at work in the American political economy that are encouraging a renewal of middle class associations to monitor powerful institutions and to advocate in behalf of the relatively powerless.
The rash of whistle-blowing disclosures of citizen professionals which have alerted us to the multi-billion dollar wastage on C-5As and attack carriers, the existence of My-Lais, the military assemblage of dossiers on 30 million civilians, …
The Black Woman: The Pr E-Decisional Stage, Phyllis Jackson
The Black Woman: The Pr E-Decisional Stage, Phyllis Jackson
IUSTITIA
This discussion is leveled at all black people at all stages of awareness and committment. Essentially it proposes a view of a method of inquiry before making a decision. It asks that people move from molecular level questions to molar level questions. These molar level questions will form a basis of inquiry during the pre-decisional stage which has the triple function of relating ideas with ideas, ideas with experience, and experience with experience. Molecular questions, on the other hand, do not call for investigation but rather "yes" or "no" answers. The black woman, as a subject of unusual interest, provides …
The Liberated Black Woman: A Question Of Black Power And Nationalism, Gail E. Bingham
The Liberated Black Woman: A Question Of Black Power And Nationalism, Gail E. Bingham
IUSTITIA
The role of the Black woman in the liberation of womankind must first be clearly defined to establish the context in which the term "liberation" is used before discussion of the subject can have any significance. If by the term "liberated," it is meant the throwing off of some kind of yoke of oppression and dehumanization invoked by men which often reflects itself in unequal opportunities and pay scales, particularly in the professional world, then it is highly questionable that the Black woman needs this type of liberation as the ultimate object of her energies and concern.
If on the …
The Beginning Of The Women's Movement In Fitchburg, Massachusetts, 1962, James Wade
The Beginning Of The Women's Movement In Fitchburg, Massachusetts, 1962, James Wade
IUSTITIA
No abstract provided.
Stranger In Our Midst: The Working Class Woman, Yvonne Van Der Klip Stam
Stranger In Our Midst: The Working Class Woman, Yvonne Van Der Klip Stam
IUSTITIA
Although some of the concrete goals of women's liberation such as adequate available day care for children are important to women of both the blue collar and middle classes, the philosophy expressed by the movement is not calculated to attract the working class woman. Two incomes may be increasingly necessary to the middle class family, and an increasing number of middle class women are now supporting their children alone, but the movement speaks of freeing women fiom child care to pursue a career, an idea which does not speak to a blue collar woman concerned with getting a job to …
Responses, Margaret Shaffer, Marilyn C. Zilli, Linda Lanam, Karen Cutwright, Sharon Wildey
Responses, Margaret Shaffer, Marilyn C. Zilli, Linda Lanam, Karen Cutwright, Sharon Wildey
IUSTITIA
Editor and author comments on articles from this issue.