Campaign Rules: A 50-State Guide to Campaigns and Elections in America, Nina Kasniunas and Daniel M. Shea, Rowman & Littlefield
Cheese Factories on the Moon: Why Earmarks are Good for American Democracy, Scott A. Frisch and Sean Q. Kelly, Paradigm Publishers
Concurring Opinion Writing on the U.S. Supreme Court, Pamela C. Corley, State University of New York Press
Congressional Ambivalence: The Political Burdens of Constitutional Authority, Jasmine Ferrier, The University Press of Kentucky
Defenders of Liberty or Champions of Security? Federal Courts, the Hierarchy of Justice, and U.S. Foreign Policy, Kirk A. Randazzo, State University of New York Press
Federal Banking in Brazil: Policies and Competitive Advantages, Kurt von Mettenheim, Pickering & Chatto
Hyperconflict: Globalization and Insecurity, James H. Mittelman, Stanford University Press
Implementing Innovation: Fostering Enduring Change in Environmental and Natural Resource Governance, Toddi A. Steelman, Georgetown University Press
Integral Pluralism: Beyond Culture Wars, Fred Dallmayr, The University Press of Kentucky
Lysander Spooner: American Anarchist, Steve J. Shone, Lexington Books
The Mobilization of Political Islam in Turkey, Banu Eligur, Cambridge University Press
Ohio's Kingmaker: Mark Hanna, Man and Myth, William T. Horner, Ohio University Press
Parties, Elections, and Policy Reforms in Western Europe: Voting for Social Pacts, Kerstin Hamann and John Kelly, Routledge
Political Realism, Freud, and Human Nature in International Relations: The Resurrection of the Realist Man, Robert Schuett, Palgrave Macmillan
Political Sociology—The State of the Art, Subrata Mitra, Malte Pehl, and Clemens Spiess, eds., Barbara Budrich Publishers
Politics in China: An Introduction, William A. Joseph, ed., Oxford University Press
The Politics of Medicaid, Laura Katz Olson, Columbia University Press
Reforming Jim Crow: Southern Politics and State in the Age before Brown, Kimberley Johnson, Oxford University Press
Regulating the Business of Insurance in a Federal System, Joseph F. Zimmerman, State University of New York Press
Rethinking Violence: States and Non-State Actors in Conflict, Erica Chenoweth, Adria Lawrence, eds., MIT Press
Speaker Nancy Pelosi and the New American Politics, Ronald M. Peters, Jr., and Cindy Simon Rosenthal, Oxford University Press
A Transformation Gap? American Innovations and European Military Change, Terry Terriff, Frans Osinga, and Theo Farrell, eds., Stanford University Press
The Theory of Multi-Level Governance, Simona Piattoni, Oxford University Press
The Underdog in American Politics: The Democratic Party and Liberal Values, Karl G. Trautman, Palgrave Macmillan
Wealth, Health, and Democracy in East Asia and Latin America, James W. McGuire, Cambridge University Press
Newcomers, Outsiders, and Insiders: Immigrants and American Racial Politics in the Early Twenty-First Century, Ronald Schmidt, Sr., Yvette M. Alex-Assensoh, Andrew L. Aoki, and Rodney E. Hero, University of Michigan Press
From the publisher
Over the past four decades, the United States has experienced the largest influx of immigrants in its history. Not only has the ratio of European to non-European newcomers changed, but the numbers of recent arrivals from the Asian subcontinent, Southeast Asia, South America, and other regions are increasing. In this timely study, a team of political scientists examines how the arrival of these newcomers has affected the efforts of long-standing U.S. minority groups—Blacks, Latinos, and Asian Pacific Americans—to gain equality through greater political representation and power. The authors predict that, for some time to come, the United States will function as a complex multiracial hierarchy, rather than as a genuine democracy.
Ronald Schmidt, Sr., is a professor of political acience at California State University, Long Beach. Yvette M. Alex-Assensoh is an associate professor of political science and Dean of the Office for Women's Affairs (OWA) at Indiana University, Bloomington. Andrew L. Aoki is a professor of political science at Augsburg College. Rodney E. Hero is the Packey J. Dee Professor of American Democracy at the University of Notre Dame.