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Belloni, F. P., & Beller, D. C. (1976). The study of party factions as competitive political organizations. Political Research Quarterly, 29(4), 531–549. This article is linked in the Week 4 Resources.
Boyd, E. (1997). American federalism, 1776 to 1997: Significant events.
Cornell University Library. (2009). Distinguishing scholarly journals from other periodicals.
Gilley, B. (2009). Is democracy possible? Journal of Democracy, 20(1), 113–127.
The Library of Congress: Thomas. (n.d.). Federalist Paper No. 10.
The Library of Congress: Thomas. (n.d.). Federalist Paper No. 51.
The Library of Congress: Thomas. (n.d.). Federalist Paper No. 78.
Machan, T. (2005). The right to private property. In Internet encyclopedia of philosophy.
McCoy, C. S. (2001). Federalism: The lost tradition? Publius, 31(2), 1–14.
Post, R. (2006). Democracy and equality. The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 603(1), 24–36.
Ranney, A., & Kendall, W. (1951). Democracy: Confusion and agreement. Political Research Quarterly, 4(3), 430–439.This article is linked in the Week 10 Resources.
Rohr, J. A. (2007). Ethics and comparative administration. Public Integrity, 10(1), 65–74.
Rohr, J. A. (1982). The Constitution in public administration: A report on education. The American Review of Public Administration, 16(4), 429–431.
The United Nations. (1948). The Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
The U.S. National Archives and Records Administration. (n.d.). Magna Carta and Its American Legacy.
The U.S. National Archives and Records Administration. (n.d.). The Virginia Declaration of Rights.
The links above are for required readings from the library databases. For all other required readings, see your course resources.
For additional library resources and help, see the complete, standard-version course guide. We strongly recommend viewing this on a larger screen.
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