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Non-Citizen Voting in the United States is a scholarly, yet engaging, analysis of the legal, political, and historical issues surrounding the growing progressive effort to give non-citizens the right to vote in America. While challenging assumptions, on both sides of the debate, the book ultimately concludes that non-citizen voting is not currently feasible on practical, theoretical, or legal grounds.
A study of the psychological background to Bill Clinton's erratic presidency, this text presents a study of the political personality and it unfolds the narrative of Clinton's rise to power.
This title examines the role of national political leaders in maintaining or dissipating America's national identity. It explores the question - is there a new American identity and if so should Americans worry about the loss of the old one?
Looking back over the last quarter of the 20th-century, Stanley Renshon provides a comprehensive account of how the issue of character has come to dominate presidential campaigns. He traces two related but distinctive approaches to a candidate's psychology: mental health and character.
Is it possible to reconcile two different nationalities, cultures, and psychologies? And what do Americans have a right to expect of immigrants and what do they have a right to expect of Americans? This title offers insight into the political and national ramifications of personal loyalties.
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