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Karen OConnor - Women and Congress: Running, Winning, and Ruling

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Karen OConnor Women and Congress: Running, Winning, and Ruling
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Women and Congress Running Winning and Ruling Women and Congress Running - photo 1
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Women and Congress: Running, Winning, and Ruling
Women and Congress: Running, Winning, and Ruling has been co-published simultaneously as Women & Politics, Volume 23, Numbers 1/2 2001.
The Women & Politics Monographic Separates
Below is a list of separates, which in serials librarianship means a special issue simultaneously published as a special journal issue or double-issue and as a separate hardbound monograph. (This is a format which we also call a DocuSerial.)
Separates are published because specialized libraries or professionals may wish to purchase a specific thematic issue by itself in a format which can be separately cataloged and shelved, as opposed to purchasing the journal on an on-going basis. Faculty members may also more easily consider a separate for classroom adoption.
Separates are carefully classified separately with the major book jobbers so that the journal tie-in can be noted on new book order slips to avoid duplicate purchasing.
You may wish to visit Haworths website at
http://www.HaworthPress.com
to search our online catalog for complete tables of contents of these separates and related publications.
You may also call 1-800-HAWORTH (outside US/Canada: 607-722-5857), or Fax 1-800-895-0582 (outside US/Canada: 607-771-0012), or e-mail at:
Women and Congress: Running, Winning, and Ruling, edited by Karen OConnor, JD, PhD (Vol. 23, No. 1/2, 2001). Bridges the past, present, and future wonderfully. Very well written accessible for students and experts alike. (Joanne Connor Green, PhD, Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, Texas Christian University, Fort Worth)
Politics and Feminist Standpoint Theories, edited by Sally J. Kenney and Helen Kinsella (Vol. 18, No. 3, 1997). Illuminating This collection will be useful to scholars and students interested in exploring how we should understand the explosion in knowledge generated by feminist projects. (Sandra Harding, PhD, Professor, Education and Womens Studies, UCLA)
The Politics of Pregnancy: Policy Dilemmas in the Maternal-Fetal Relationship, edited by Janna C. Merrick, PhD, and Robert H. Blank, PhD (Vol. 13, No. 3/4, 1994). A valuable resource for teachers or upper-level college students. (Science Books & Films)
Women and Public Administration: International Perspectives, edited by Jane H. Bayes (Vol. 11, No. 4, 1992). A long-awaited important six-nation comparative analysis of womens role in public administration. (Joyce Gelb, PhD, Professor, Department of Political Science, City College and Graduate Center, CUNY)
Women, Politics and the Constitution, edited by Naomi B. Lynn, PhD (Vol. 10, No. 2, 1990). Fresh, new, and challenging. Naomi Lynn has done well in assembling these diverse perspectives on women and the Constitution. (J. Darcy, PhD, Professor, Department of Political Science, Oklahoma State University)
Feminism and Epistemology: Approaches to Research in Women and Politics, edited by Maria J. Falco, PhD (Vol. 7, No. 3, 1988). Here is a timely and informative introduction to a new phase of the ongoing feminist dialogue, reflecting the special dimension feminists have added to the debate over the positivist-behavioral paradigm.
The Politics of Professionalism, Opportunity, Employment, and Gender, edited by Sarah Slavin, PhD (Vol. 6, No. 3, 1987). Presents a picture of the complex social processes we characterize as political, and a better sense of the less obvious elements that determine the political process.
Women as Elders: Images, Visions, and Issues, edited by Marilyn J. Bell, PhD (Vol. 6, No. 2, 1987). Recommended for any woman who is interested in the issues of aging and any woman who is attempting to create an empowered, positive identity for herself, at any age. (Common Ground)
Gender and Socialization to Power and Politics, edited by Rita Mae Kelly, PhD (Vol. 5, No. 4, 1986). Illustrates how the interaction of childhood socialization and the reality of the adult womans life produces variations in political attitudes and in perceptions of available options for political behavior.
Criminal Justice Politics and Women: The Aftermath of Legally Mandated Change, edited by Claudine Schweber, PhD, and Clarice Feinman, PhD (Vol. 4, No. 3, 1985). A good introduction to the subject. The book will enlighten readers who may believe that discrimination can be readily eliminated through legal changes alone. (Corrections Today)
United Nations Decade for Women World Conference, edited by Naomi B. Lynn, PhD (Vol. 4, No. 1, 1984). Experts assess the progress that has been made, lament the failure of nations to take more steps to improve womens status, and analyze the divisive issues that have been at the forefront of concern and have limited the achievements of the two United Nations conferences on women.
Biopolitics and Gender, edited by Meredith W. Watts (Vol. 3, No. 2/3, 1984). Provocative. Welcomed as a way to broaden discussion of gender beyond an exclusive focus on sex links to oppression and discrimination. (Political Science Quarterly)
Women in Developing Countries: A Policy Focus, edited by Kathleen Staudt and Jane Jacquette (Vol. 2, No. 4, 1983). Recommend[ed] to any reader who would like to learn more about how it is possible, through mismanagement, ignorance, lack of powerful women staff members, and the deliberate ignoring of womens needs, to pour substantial amounts of money into development programs without helping women at all. (International Journal of Womens Studies)
The Equal Rights Amendment: The Politics and Process of Ratification of the 27th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, edited by Sarah Slavin, PhD (Vol. 2, No. 1/2, 1982). An exploration of the attempt to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment and efforts of organizations and individual states to either secure or defeat ratification.
Women and Congress: Running, Winning, and Ruling has been co-published simultaneously as Women & Politics, Volume 23, Numbers 1/2 2001.
2001 by The Haworth Press, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this work may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, microfilm and recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. Printed in the United States of America.
The development, preparation, and publication of this work has been undertaken with great care. However, the publisher, employees, editors, and agents of The Haworth Press and all imprints of The Haworth Press, Inc., including The Haworth Medical Press and Pharmaceutical Products Press, are not responsible for any errors contained herein or for consequences that may ensue from use of materials or information contained in this work. Opinions expressed by the author(s) are not necessarily those of The Haworth Press, Inc. With regard to case studies, identities and circumstances of individuals discussed herein have been changed to protect confidentiality. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Cover design by Jennifer M. Gaska
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
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