politics

"Election 2008: Race, Gender and the Media"
 A special panel discussion featuring Laura Flanders, Glen Ford & Gary Younge

Thursday, October 2nd 

7:30 - 9 pm: Panel discussion 

9 – 10:30 pm: Debate watching party

At the Brecht Forum 
451 West Street (West Side Highway / between Bank & Bethune Streets) 
Sliding scale: $6/$10/$15 • Free for Brecht Forum Subscribers

Join FAIR, the Manhattan Neighborhood Network and the Brecht Forum for a panel discussion, Q&A and debate-watching party on the night of the debate between vice presidential nominees Joe Biden and Sarah Palin.

The evening will kick off with a panel discussion on race, gender and the media in the 2008 election. In an election year that has seen the first black candidate nominated for president by a major party and the first Republican woman nominated for vice president--while two women of color have teamed up on the Green Party ticket--issues of race and gender have been at the forefront during this campaign season, not least in media coverage. But how well have the media served the public in this historic election? What issues are being ignored, even as the press heralds the race as evidence of shattered glass ceilings and the "end of black politics"? Journalists Laura Flanders, Glen Ford and Gary Younge take a closer look.

Then stick around with FAIR at the Brecht Forum to watch the vice presidential debate.

QUESTION: Anti-Nepotism Organization

question / pregunta: 

I'm trying to find an organization (or see if one exists) that supports political candidates without family connections and/or wealth. Something similar to Emily's List. I'm not even sure what it would be called: Anti-nepotism? First generation politicians? Anti-dynasty?

Answers

In addition to Jim's notes, I wanted to add that there are several resources for looking into campaign finance. One place to start looking is on the Voting and the November 2nd Election page on the Radical Reference Shelf. With Project Vote Smart you can track campaign financing.
There is a directory of political organizations on yahoo and lists 77 political organizations.

To find other research on this topic, you may want to search in library catalogs and full-text databases using the Library of Congress subject headings below:
Nepotism.
Pressure groups -- United States.
Elite (Social sciences) -- United States.
Political corruption -- Prevention.
Political corruption -- Economic aspects.

Using


Answer posted by:
jim miller

There seems to be nothing promising on this short of a VERY extensive search, following vague leads in organizations that possibly might be interested in this issue. For example, the following Google searches may find sites that mention useful organizations, far down in some very long lists of hits:

"political dynasties" "U S" site:org gets a whopping 3,000+ hits, but many are books.
("political dynasties" "U S" site:org) not books gets 400+
allintitle: "political dynasties" site:org gets 800+ hits

It might be best to try more specific searches first:

allintitle: "political dynasties" "u s" 30 hits
allintitle: "political dynasties" american 65 hits
"political dynasties" american nonprofit site:org 200+

I found little that seems promising in commercial databases. In Proquest Dissertations the search: anti nepotism gets 2 hits, the first of which is:

Three essays in political economy by Kim, Kwang-ho, Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania, 2004, 113 pages; AAT 3125846
Abstract (Summary) This dissertation consists of three essays in political economy. In Chapter 1, we analyze the inefficiency that may arise in the form of reverse discrimination in the presence of favoritism or nepotism. Favoritism is typically associated with inefficient transfers to the core support of the incumbent government. But inefficiency opposite in nature may also arise through the electoral process in a political environment where favoritism is pervasive. We show that if the policy maker is sufficiently office seeking, a socially efficient action may never be taken if it yields benefits to his core support due to reputational concerns. Hence, the core support of the incumbent may fare worse than other groups. We also consider the implications of policies such as anti-nepotism

Also in Proquest Dissertations, the search: laws and nepotism gets 11 hits, mainly about public schools, businesses, and other countries
The database America: History and Life gets 16 hits for the search: political dynast*. The search: political famil* gets 8 hits, and dynasties gets 172, 144 of them in academic journals. JSTOR gets 98 hits for "political families" AND america*, and may be your best bet for finding research on the topic. But it seems doubtful that many, if any, of these articles were funded by organizations devoted to the study of nepotism, or "political families", etc.

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