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Journal Article
New Political Science (1979) 1 (1): 78–80.
Published: 01 March 1979
... on the Status of Federal Repressive Legislation Victor Wallis At its 1978 annual business meeting, the Caucus passed a resolution expressing opposition to the proposed Federal Criminal Code (originally S.l, later S.1437). Even in its revised version, the proposed code included numerous measures damaging...
Journal Article
New Political Science (1999) 21 (2): 131–155.
Published: 01 June 1999
... Christopher Norman and Shakeena Lowe for their assistance. © 1999 Caucus for a New Political Science 1999 New Political Science, Volume 21, Number 2, 1999 131 Repression Breeds Resistance: The Black Liberation Army and the Radical Legacy of the Black Panther Party* Akinyele Omowale Umoja Georgia State...
Journal Article
New Political Science (1991) 10 (1): 117–127.
Published: 01 July 1991
...Carl Swidoski Carl Swidoski Civil Liberties, Repression and the Law Richard Polenberg: Fighting Faiths: The Abrams Case, the Supreme Court, and Free Speech (New York: Viking Penguin Inc. 1987.) Richard O. Curry. edt Freedom atRisk: Secrecy, Censorship and Repression in the 1980's. (Philadelphia...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2014) 36 (4): 438–458.
Published: 01 December 2014
..., and censures at American universities that progressive historians have ironically chronicled as a history of the development of academic freedom in the United States. In fact, the early “academic freedom” cases were successful acts of academic repression and, in this context, Charles A. Beard’s resignation...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2014) 36 (4): 647–650.
Published: 01 December 2014
...Jyl Josephson New Political Science, 2014 Vol. 36,~o. 4, 647-655 Book Reviews Piya Chatterjee and Sunaina Maira, eds, The Imperial University: Academic Repression and Scholarly Dissent, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2014, 400 pp. Everyone seems to believe there is a crisis in higher...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2016) 38 (4): 516–532.
Published: 01 December 2016
... the emancipatory impulses animating these demonstrations. The reactions are often justified under the banners of tolerance, chastising students to listen instead of protest.This article, focusing on Marcuse’s concepts of repressive toleration and counterrevolution, evaluates the reactionary responses...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2016) 38 (4): 561–581.
Published: 01 December 2016
...Nancy D. Wadsworth Abstract Marcuse argued that subversive visions of a better reality can emerge from “low” as well as “high” culture, from within as well as outside the repressive apparatus.This article leverages Marcuse’s aesthetic theory to consider whether the enormously popular AMC cable...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2025) 47 (1): 49–73.
Published: 01 March 2025
... counterrevolution began with several acts of academic repression designed to purge some of the most prominent leftists from academia, although this repression mostly took other forms during the 1980s. The intellectual leaders of this counterrevolution included figures such as Ronald Reagan, William J. Bennett...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2015) 37 (4): 604–619.
Published: 01 December 2015
... interest has been obstructed by state repression, by identity politics, and by the ideology of postmodernism. © 2015 Caucus for a New Political Science 2015 NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE, 2015 VOL. 37, NO.4, 604-619 httpdx.doLorg/l0.l080/07393148.2015.1089032 Intersectionality's Binding Agent: The Political...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2007) 29 (3): 313–331.
Published: 01 September 2007
... state regimes affect citizens’ freedom to survive apart from dependence on the labor market or upon a male breadwinner, along with scholarship that highlights the malign functions of relief, then explicitly repressive institutions become legitimately within the purview of welfare state analysis...
Journal Article
New Political Science (1999) 21 (2): 231–236.
Published: 01 June 1999
...Kathleen Neal Cleaver Abstract The relevant way to understand gender dynamics inside the Black Panther Party starts with this question: “How could a young black woman raised during the 1950s find someplace to take collective action against the repressive social conditions she faced and bring about...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2018) 40 (4): 744–762.
Published: 01 December 2018
...Alexandra C. Budabin; Joel R. Pruce Abstract Advocacy nongovernmental organizations based in the North adopt digital tools to bypass repressive regimes, raise awareness amongst global publics, sustain grassroots activists in the South, and engage in political action. Social media was expected...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2013) 35 (2): 161–181.
Published: 01 June 2013
...Neil A. Burron Abstract This article argues that Haiti’s new president, Michel Martelly, represents a populist-authoritarian project that combines limited forms of inclusion with repression in an effort to stabilize Haiti’s polarized social structure. Nearly a decade after a UN stabilization...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2014) 36 (4): 640–646.
Published: 01 December 2014
...Clyde W. Barrow New Political Science, 2014 Vol. 36, No.4, 640-646, httpdx.doi.org/10.1080/07393148.2014.954794 ~l Routledge ~~ Taylor&FrancisGroup Review Essay The Coming of the Corporate-Fascist University? Anthony J. Nocella, II, Steven Best, and Peter McLaren, Academic Repression: Reflections...
Journal Article
New Political Science (1980) 1 (4): 19–24.
Published: 01 September 1980
... of the unconscious. For if sexuality could be shown to defy the social order because it was indifferent, if not hostile, to the demand for labor, the reproduction of monogamous family relations, and social discipline in general, the phenomenon of social repression, including some important 19 20 NEW POLITICAL...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2003) 25 (2): 273–280.
Published: 01 June 2003
... political insights presented in this essay. ISSN 0739-3148 print/ISSN 1469-9931 online/03/020273-08 © 2003 Caucus for a New Political Science DOl: 10.1080/0739314032000081612 274 Charles Reitz "Repressive Tolerance2 I do find it entirely predictable that right wing writers like Kors and Silverglate feel...
Journal Article
New Political Science (1979) 1 (1): 12–18.
Published: 01 March 1979
... society and can serve as an impetus to radical political practice. 9 Whereas in his article "Repressive Tolerance" in 1965, Marcuse argued that the liberal rights and liberties were often used to legitimate the current society, in the present illiberal society, and in the face of a concerted right wing...
Journal Article
New Political Science (1999) 21 (2): 285–292.
Published: 01 June 1999
... quickly built up a wide following, but in so doing set off the loudest possible alarm signals in the nation's power centers. The result was an official repressive campaign of unprecedented ferocity, which destroyed the Party within a few years and inflicted a long-term setback not just on its own...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2011) 33 (1): 1–22.
Published: 01 March 2011
... importance, the measure of human rights would be their enjoyment. This article develops a political science of human rights that puts rights enjoyment at the center of the study of the patterns of human rights conditions in countries. What factors contribute to human rights enjoyment in a country? Repression...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2016) 38 (4): 598–599.
Published: 01 December 2016
... critical to understanding, and undoing, the political economy of inequality and exploitation. In his chapter, Arnold Farr bUilds a compelling discussion around Marcuse's distinction between "emancipatory education" and "repressive education:' While the former provides students with ways of understanding...