In an interdisciplinary study, John Theilmann and Al Wilhite
examine the role of campaign contributions in the election of
blacks and women to the U.S. House of Representatives during the
1980s. The volume provides an historical overview of discrimination
and campaign financing, a model of campaign contributions based on
rent-seeking paradigm from public choice, and statistical testing
of this model.
Using an approach that is in part historical/narrative and in
part theoretical/statistical, this book begins with a brief
discussion of the political position of women and blacks from the
early years of the republic to the 1970s. Chapter two examines the
notable political gains made by both groups during the 1970s.
Chapter three provides an overview of the impact of political money
through history, and focuses on several explanations of the role of
money in congressional elections since the passage of FECA. The
next four chapters are theoretical explorations of campaign
decisions linked with empirical measures of the influence of race
and gender on these decisions. Theilmann and Wilhite present a
rent-seeking model of the campaign strategy and an examination of
both candidate and contributor decisions. The theoretical
perspectives derived from these discussions serve as the basis for
analysis of political action contributions, party contributions,
and individual contributions. Finally, the authors return to the
question of blacks and women in Congress during the 1980s, as
impacted by campaign funding. Based on their analysis, they engage
in some predictions of the future for black and female
congressional candidates. These observations will interest academic
audiences in the studies of political science, economics, and race
relations, as well as anyone with an interest in race/sexual
discrimination and congressional campaign finance reform.
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