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This edited collection describes and discusses the advances of
African Americans since the 1960s in the context of political
philosophy, specifically, utilitarian liberalism revisited as 1980s
and 1990s conservatism. Identifying the basic assumptions of
utilitarian liberalism with respect to governance and
representation, it uses these constructs to explain public policy
outcomes in African-American communities. The three core themes
are: governance and the role of the state; African American
responses and strategies for empowerment; and policy adjustments of
the state. It is a major contribution to the discourse on a problem
central to contemporary public policy debate: the appropriate role
of government in the regulation of public and private behavior to
achieve a balance between freedom and justice.
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