ABSTRACT

This chapter reviews F. James Davis's Who is Black? One Nation's Definition, Leslie T. Hatamiya's Righting a Wrong: Japanese Americans and the Passage of the Civil Liberties Act of 1988, Paget Henry and Paul Buhle's C. L. R James's Caribbean. It analyzes W. Marvin Dulaney and Kathleen Underwood's Essays on the American Civil Rights Movement, and Gordon S. Black and Benjamin D. Black's The Politics of American Discontent: How a New Party Can Make Democracy Work Again. The chapter presents Allen D. Hertzke's Echoes of Discontent: Jesse Jackson, Pat Robertson, and the Resurgence of Populism, John Gray's Post-Liberalism: Studies in Political Thought, and Judith Grant's Fundamental Feminism: Contesting the Core Concepts of Feminist Theory. It also reviews A. John Williamson and Fred C. Pampel's Old Age Security in Comparative Perspective, and Richard Rose's Lesson-Drawing in Public Policy: A Guide to Learning Across Time and Space, and Michael J. Glennon's When No Ma-jority Rules: The Electoral College and Presidential Succession.