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Showing 1 - 4 of 4 matches in All Departments
What does it take to win the White House? This text helps students
understand both the issues and how and why people vote for a
candidate. After discussing the dynamics of the primary campaigns,
the authors examine three broad sets of issues that play a key role
in voting: foreign policy, domestic policies, and the culture wars.
This sets the foundations for an examination of regional
similarities and differences in voting patterns, as the varying
salience and valence of issues--whether general or specific--is
explored across and within regions. Special attention is paid to
battleground states. Drawing on concepts from political science,
this book advances students' understanding both of the field and
the phenomenon.
"Neither a case study of a particular genocide nor a work of comparative genocide, this book explores the political constraints and imperatives that motivate debates about genocide in the academic world and, to a lesser extent, in the political arena. The book is an analysis of the ways that political interests shape discourse about genocide. It consists of case studies of Cambodia, Bangladesh, the Ottoman Armenians, the Holocaust and a comparative study of the concept of genocide provocation as applied to the Armenians, and Tutsis."--
What does it take to win the White House? This text helps students
understand both the issues and how and why people vote for a
candidate. After discussing the dynamics of the primary campaigns,
the authors examine three broad sets of issues that play a key role
in voting: foreign policy, domestic policies, and the culture wars.
This sets the foundations for an examination of regional
similarities and differences in voting patterns, as the varying
salience and valence of issues--whether general or specific--is
explored across and within regions. Special attention is paid to
battleground states. Drawing on concepts from political science,
this book advances students' understanding both of the field and
the phenomenon.
Neither a case study of a particular genocide nor a work of comparative genocide, this book explores the political constraints and imperatives that motivate debates about genocide in the academic world and, to a lesser extent, in the political arena. The book is an analysis of the ways that political interests shape discourse about genocide.
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