Suchergebnisse
Filter
79 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
Beyond civil rights: a new day of equality
The New Humphrey-Hawkins Bill
In: Challenge: the magazine of economic affairs, Band 19, Heft 2, S. 21-29
ISSN: 1558-1489
Guaranteed Jobs for Human Rights
In: The annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Band 418, Heft 1, S. 17-25
ISSN: 1552-3349
This article discusses briefly the evolution and expansion of the right to meaningful employment in the United States; the impact of job guarantee legislation, in cluding the proposed Equal Opportunity and Full Employ ment Act of 1976, and other related legislation; and the relationships between employment levels and such issues as inflation, crime, political power structures, and the ethics underlying true equal employment opportunity. Passage of a strong Equal Opportunity and Full Employment Act is urged.
Guaranteed jobs for human rights
In: The annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Band 418, S. 17-25
ISSN: 0002-7162
Changes in the Vice Presidency
In: Current history: a journal of contemporary world affairs, Band 67, Heft 396, S. 58-59
ISSN: 1944-785X
A World Food Action Program
In: Worldview, Band 17, Heft 8, S. 26-29
We have been waging a battle to improve the quality of life in the developing world for twenty-five years. Today this battle is being lost. As the world's military powers seek to reduce the risks of nuclear holocaust, new dangers to political and economic stability have arisen.The threat of widespread famine is on the increase. Fertilizer shortages grow, and the affluent continue to consume a disproportionate amount of the world's food resources. Worldwide inflation continues to take a heavy toll on the developing and the developed countries alike. This erodes political stability and depletes what little hard currency the poor nations have amassed.
Changes in the vice presidency
In: Current history: a journal of contemporary world affairs, Band 67, S. 58-59
ISSN: 0011-3530
"To Secure These Rights": The Need for a New Majority Coalition
We have learned in the last two decades important lessons in both the law and the politics of civil rights. I wish to underscore certain of these realities in outlining a civil rights strategy for the decade of the 1970's. We look back at the civil rights battles of the 1950's and 1960's with an air of nostalgia. In those years the legislative goals were relatively well defined: the removal of a host of legal barriers t, civil equality and equal opportunity. More than this, the legal barriers existed primarily in one section of the country so that the lives of most Americans would be unaffected by whatever reforms we might achieve in Congress. We were, in a sense, working with a civil rights agenda that was uniquely suited to legislative remedy.We now look back on those times as the easy days of the civil rights struggle. But if we think a moment longer, these days were not so easy.In the early 1950's, the number of United States Senators who were actively committed to passing the pending civil rights legislation could caucus in the rear corner of the Senate cloakroom. And I have the distinct impression that the Senate establishment of those years was decidedly unenthusiastic about these bills. One might even say down-right hostile. Those were years of unrelieved frustration and failure, until Senate Majority Leader Lyndon Johnson decided that we could postpone no longer the most urgent portions of the pending legislation. In what still must be regarded as one of the Senate's most amazing demonstrations of parliamentary skill, the Civil Rights Act of 1957 became law when Lyndon Johnson maneuvered the legislation through the Senate without a filibuster.
BASE
II. An End to Nuclear Gamesmanship
In: Bulletin of the atomic scientists, Band 28, Heft 3, S. 12-15
ISSN: 1938-3282
Dynamic domestic development called for by Humphrey
In: National civic review: publ. by the National Municipal League, Band 61, S. 7-10
ISSN: 0027-9013
Dynamic domestic development called for by humphrey
In: National civic review: promoting civic engagement and effective local governance for more than 100 years, Band 61, Heft 1, S. 7-10
ISSN: 1542-7811
AbstractThe United States needs to spend at least a decade applying to the problems of our cities and rural areas the same principles of finance and development used in the international arena.
American foreign policy: the hard lessons of war and peace
In: World affairs: a journal of ideas and debate, Band 134, S. 193-209
ISSN: 0043-8200
Hubert Humphrey looks at "the generation gap."
In: U.S. news & world report, Band 67, S. 47-50
ISSN: 0041-5537