BLACK REPRESENTATION ON CENTRAL CITY SCHOOL BOARDS REVISITED

This article is an extension of Welch and Karnig's (1978) school board study analyzing black representation. The sample size has been increased from their 43 to our 75 central cities. Unlike Welch and Karnig, we find that at-large electoral systems significantly reduce proportionally based equi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Social science quarterly 1981-09, Vol.62 (3), p.495-502
Hauptverfasser: ROBINSON, Ted, ENGLAND, Robert E.
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container_issue 3
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container_title Social science quarterly
container_volume 62
creator ROBINSON, Ted
ENGLAND, Robert E.
description This article is an extension of Welch and Karnig's (1978) school board study analyzing black representation. The sample size has been increased from their 43 to our 75 central cities. Unlike Welch and Karnig, we find that at-large electoral systems significantly reduce proportionally based equitable black representation.
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source PAIS Index; Alma/SFX Local Collection; JSTOR; Periodicals Index Online; EBSCOhost Business Source Complete
subjects Black public officials
Boards of education
Cities
City councils
City wards
Minorities, Politics and Policy Change
Population mean
Population size
Population structure
Ratios
School boards
Urban schools
Urban studies
title BLACK REPRESENTATION ON CENTRAL CITY SCHOOL BOARDS REVISITED
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