 | Izabela Adasiewicz Death Penalty Society’s support for the death penalty is waning, but there is still enough support in the United States to keep it legal in many states. In our country, dozens of people are put to death every year 15.93 Kb. 1 | read |
 | Table of Contents Unit: Colonial Society Issue: Is America Exceptional? Yes: Seymour Martin Lipset‚ Yes: Seymour Martin Lipset‚ from “Still the Exceptional Nation?” The Wilson Quarterly vol. 24, pp. 31–36, 40–45 44.5 Kb. 16 | read |
 | The Bracero Program The economic and social upheaval stemming from both the Great Depression and World War II forced the United States to seek out a source of inexpensive labor to meet its manpower needs in both agriculture and railway maintenance 123.27 Kb. 1 | read |
 | The Future of American Power How America Can Survive the Rise of the Rest Britain's decline was driven by bad economics. The United States, in contrast, has the strength and dynamism to continue shaping the world but only if it can overcome its political dysfunction and reorient U 111.5 Kb. 1 | read |
 | United states district court Rehabilitation Act of 1973, 29 U. S. C. § 794, the Pennsylvania Human Relations Act, 43 P. S. § 951 et seq., and the Human Relations Fair Practices Ordinance, The Philadelphia Code § 9-1105 et seq 38 Kb. 1 | read |
 | The following paper is the transcript of a talk that I have delivered this fall to general audiences at the University of Tennessee and the University of Notre Dame Democracy and Tradition (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2004). I would encourage anyone interested in the details of my critique of Rawls and Rorty to read chapter My critiques of John Milbank, Alasdair MacIntyre 62 Kb. 1 | read |