The Irony of Democracy An Uncommon Introduction to American Politics |
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Página 35
... believed in a law of nature with rules of abstract justice to which the laws of men should conform . They believed that this law of nature endowed man with certain inalienable rights that were essential to a meaningful existence for a ...
... believed in a law of nature with rules of abstract justice to which the laws of men should conform . They believed that this law of nature endowed man with certain inalienable rights that were essential to a meaningful existence for a ...
Página 36
... believed in limited government . Government should be designed so that it would not become a threat to liberty or property . Since the Founding Fathers believed that power was a cor- rupting influence and that the concentration of power ...
... believed in limited government . Government should be designed so that it would not become a threat to liberty or property . Since the Founding Fathers believed that power was a cor- rupting influence and that the concentration of power ...
Página 85
... believed that the economic machinery of the nation had broken down and that the political fabric of America was beginning to disintegrate . He believed he had stabilized the economy and turned politics safely back to its normal ...
... believed that the economic machinery of the nation had broken down and that the political fabric of America was beginning to disintegrate . He believed he had stabilized the economy and turned politics safely back to its normal ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The Irony of Democracy: An Uncommon Introduction to American Politics Thomas R. Dye,Luther Harmon Zeigler Vista de fragmentos - 1970 |
The Irony of Democracy: An Uncommon Introduction to American Politics Thomas R. Dye,Luther Harmon Zeigler Sin vista previa disponible - 1978 |
Términos y frases comunes
activity America's elite American parties American Political Articles of Confederation attitudes Bank behavior bill candidates civil rights commitment committee Company competition conflict Congress congressmen consensus conservatism Constitution Convention Corporation decision delegates democracy democratic dominant economic Eisenhower elections electorate elite system elite theory elites and masses established executive federal Federalist foreign policy Founding Fathers ghetto governmental elites Harold Lasswell House ideology income individual industrial influence institutions interest groups Irony of Democracy issues J. P. Morgan labor leaders leadership legislation legislatures liberal Madison majority membership ment military national government Negroes opinion organizations participation party percent plural political system population position president presidential protect public policy representative Republican riots Robert Dahl role rules Senate slaves social society Southern structure Supreme Court symbolic TABLE tion United urban V. O. Key Vietnam violence vote voters Washington welfare York