First Sentence:
Race continues to be the most important line of conflict in American electoral politics.
Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs):
(learn more)
white nonvoters, racial disaffection, southern cities data, nonvoting whites, blacks equilibrium, racial specialization, whites equilibrium, mobilization appeal, black eligibles, conversion appeal, white precincts, predatory politics, white defections, individual partisanship, coalitional equilibrium, fourth equilibrium, biracial coalition, mobilization rates, racial fissure, racially polarized society, black precincts, postmaterial values, defection rate, structured politics, political heterogeneity
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs):
(learn more)
New Deal, United States, National Election Studies, World War, Level of Republican Support, Lyndon Johnson, New York, Franklin Roosevelt, Harold Washington, Jimmy Carter, Walter Mondale, Year Source, Civil Rights Act, Civil War, Jim Crow, North Carolina, Presidential Election Year, Voting Rights Act, White Democratic Proportion, Barry Goldwater, Black Precincts Source, Democratic South, George Wallace, South Carolina, Tom Bradley
New!
Books on Related Topics |
Concordance
|
Text Stats
Browse Sample Pages:
Front Cover |
Front Flap |
Table of Contents |
First Pages |
Index |
Back Flap |
Back Cover |
Surprise Me!