Racial Bias: A Buried Cornerstone of the Administrative State:

作者: Jennifer Alexander , Camilla Stivers

DOI: 10.1177/0095399720921508

关键词:

摘要: Historians of American public administration have largely perpetuated its self-image neutrality and scientific detachment. Yet agencies are shaped by their political cultural environm...

参考文章(20)
Bruce E. Baker, Brian Kelly, After Slavery After Slavery: Race, Labor, and Citizenship in the Reconstruction South. ,(2013) , 10.5744/FLORIDA/9780813044774.001.0001
Matthew T. Witt, Notes from the Margin: Race, Relevance and the Making of Public Administration Administrative Theory & Praxis. ,vol. 28, pp. 36- 68 ,(2006) , 10.1080/10841806.2006.11029524
William Blair, The Use of Military Force to Protect the Gains of Reconstruction Civil War History. ,vol. 51, pp. 388- 402 ,(2005) , 10.1353/CWH.2005.0055
Jennifer Alexander, Avoiding the Issue The American Review of Public Administration. ,vol. 27, pp. 343- 361 ,(1997) , 10.1177/027507409702700403
Tommie Shelby, Is Racism in the "Heart"? Journal of Social Philosophy. ,vol. 33, pp. 411- 420 ,(2002) , 10.1111/0047-2786.00150
Barry D. Karl, Public Administration and American History: A Century of Professionalism Public Administration Review. ,vol. 36, pp. 489- ,(1976) , 10.2307/974229
Robert C. Lieberman, The Freedmen’s Bureau and the Politics of Institutional Structure Social Science History. ,vol. 18, pp. 405- 437 ,(1994) , 10.1017/S0145553200017089