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  • Rhoda Baer

    Verlag: Alper Initiative for Washington Art

    Anbieter: Wonder Book, Frederick, MD, USA

    Verbandsmitglied: ABAA ILAB

    Verkäuferbewertung 5 von 5 Sternen 5 Sterne, Erfahren Sie mehr über Verkäufer-Bewertungen

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    Signiert

    EUR 16,96

    Versand gratis
    Versand innerhalb von USA

    Anzahl: 1 verfügbar

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    Zustand: As New. Signed Copy . Signed by artist on title page. (sculptures, art, artists, exhibitions).

  • Edelman, Peter

    Sprache: Englisch

    Verlag: Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston, 2001

    ISBN 10: 0395895448 ISBN 13: 9780395895443

    Anbieter: Ground Zero Books, Ltd., Silver Spring, MD, USA

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    Erstausgabe Signiert

    EUR 84,92

    EUR 4,34 Versand
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    Anzahl: 3 verfügbar

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    Hardcover. Zustand: Very good. Zustand des Schutzumschlags: Very good. Rhoda Baer (Author photograph) (illustrator). First Printing [Stated]. viii, [2], 22 pages. Index. Inscribed by the author on the fep. Peter Benjamin Edelman (born January 9, 1938) is an American lawyer, policy maker, and law professor at Georgetown University Law Center, specializing in the fields of poverty, welfare, juvenile justice, and constitutional law. He worked for Senator Robert F. Kennedy, and for the Clinton administration, where he resigned to protest Bill Clinton's signing the welfare reform legislation. Edelman was one of the founders and president of the board of the New Israel Fund. Edelman was a legislative assistant to Senator Robert F. Kennedy, from 1964 to 1968, accompanying Kennedy to his meeting with labor leader Cesar Chavez. Edelman met his wife while touring impoverished areas of Mississippi with Kennedy to prepare for reauthorization of the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964. Edelman briefly period worked as deputy director for the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Center for Human Rights. Derived from a Kirkus review: Edelman, a former aide to Robert Kennedy, combines memoir and polemic in his repudiation of current tactics in the war on poverty. He begins by recounting Kennedy's views on how the power of the state might best be used to end economic injustice in Americaa task, the author writes, that Kennedy believed would best be accomplished by creating and sustaining meaningful, community-based jobs. He examines the Clinton administration's checkered service in this war with some disdain; a onetime presidential adviser on welfare policy, Edelman cannot contain his disgust at Clinton's retreat from principle in the face of the Gingrich-led Republican revolution of 1994. Edelman calls for a rethinking of welfare policy beyond the current one-size-fits-all model. A solid argument to extend the nation's present prosperity to the lowest echelons, as Robert Kennedy urged three decades ago.

  • Cole, David and Lobel, Jules

    Sprache: Englisch

    Verlag: The New Press, New York, 2007

    ISBN 10: 1595581332 ISBN 13: 9781595581334

    Anbieter: Ground Zero Books, Ltd., Silver Spring, MD, USA

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    Erstausgabe

    EUR 89,39

    EUR 4,34 Versand
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    Anzahl: 1 verfügbar

    In den Warenkorb

    Hardcover. Zustand: Good. Zustand des Schutzumschlags: Very good. Rhoda Baer (Author Cole photograph) and Robert Dal (illustrator). First Printing [Stated]. The format is approximately 5.75 inches by 8.5 inches. x, 326 pages. Notes. Index. Inscribed by the primary author on the half-title page. The inscription reads 9.25.07 For Tom Timm--Thanks for your support of the role of law. David Cole. Corners of many pages creased but not marks to text noted. David D. Cole is the National Legal Director of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). Before joining the ACLU in July 2016, Cole was the Hon. George J. Mitchell Professor in Law and Public Policy at the Georgetown University Law Center from March 2014 through December 2016. He has published in various legal fields including constitutional law, national security, criminal justice, civil rights, and law and literature. Cole has litigated several significant First Amendment cases in the Supreme Court of the United States, as well a number of influential cases concerning civil rights and national security. He is also a legal correspondent to several mainstream media outlets and publications. Professor Jules Lobel is the Bessie McKee Walthour Endowed Chair at the University of Pittsburgh School of Law. Lobel co-authored the award winning book, Less Safe, Less Free: Why America is Losing the War on Terror (2007) with Professor David Cole, which won the first Roy C. Palmer Civil Liberties Prize for exemplary scholarship exploring the tension between civil liberties and national security. He is also the author of, Success without Victory: Lost Legal Battles and the Long Road to Justice in America (2003), and editor of several books on Civil Rights Litigation as well as the U.S. Constitution. A cogent critique of the new "preventive paradigm" in counterterrorism policy by two of the nation's leading legal scholars. "If we wait for threats to fully materialize, we will have waited too long."--President George W. Bush, defending the National Security Strategy doctrine "preemptive war," Commencement Speech at West Point, June 1, 2002. In Steven Spielberg's science fiction thriller Minority Report, the Justice Department uses psychic visionaries to predict and prevent future crimes. President Bush has no psychic visionaries, but in fighting the war on terrorism his administration has nonetheless adopted a sweeping new "preemptive" strategy, which turns on the ability to predict the future. At home and abroad, the administration has cut corners on fundamental commitments of the rule of law in the name of preventing future attacks--from "waterboarding" detainees, to disappearing suspects into secret CIA prisons, to attacking Iraq against the wishes of the UN Security Council and most of the world when it posed no imminent threat of attacking us. In this brilliantly conceived critique, two of the country's preeminent constitutional scholars argue that the great irony is that these sacrifices in the rule of law, adopted in the name of prevention, have in fact made us more susceptible to future terrorist attacks. They conclusively debunk the administration's claim that it is winning the war on terror and offer an alternative strategy in which the rule of law is an asset, not an obstacle, in the struggle to keep us both safe and free. Derived from a Kirkus review: Call it speculation on disaster, the administration's policy of guessing where future threats lie and then impinging, imprisoning, invading. That policy, argue Cole and Lobel, is a failure. "There is nothing wrong with prevention as an objective," the authors assert; prevention is a goal of public safety as much as of public health. Yet the administration's "preventive paradigm" attacks the rule of law writ large, and specifically commitments to equality, transparency, due process, checks and balances, basic human rights and other operational principles and ideals. "Bush's preventive paradigm," Cole and Lobel maintain, "has violated each of these commitments, imposing double standards on the most vulnerable, operating in secret, denying fair trials, imposing guilt by association, intentio.