Legislators, Law and Public Policy: Political Change in Mississippi and the South
By (Author) Mary D. Coleman
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th January 1993
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Central / national / federal government
328.75
Hardback
200
This book evaluates Mississippi politics since the pivotal 1978 Connor v. Johnson decision, which replaced multi-member legislative districts with single-member districts. Mary DeLorse Coleman examines how, after an arduous journey through the judicial system, this decision changed the profile of Mississippi politics from its domination by the agrarian elite to its integration by multi-racial representatives. The study issues a challenge to the legislature, formerly a stronghold of white leadership, to foster legislation which will erase racial and class divisions. The analysis begins with a review of black politics from 1865 to 1986, followed by an in-depth account of the Connor litigation. Attention turns to the subsequent voting actions of the Mississippi legislature and what variables predict member voting. Although Mississippi politics is the book's primary topic, Coleman demonstrates how it serves as a touchstone from which to view politics throughout the deep South and Black politics in general. A bibliography and general subject index complete the work.
The author, herself rooted as youth and adult in the Mississippi experience, provides an insightful account as she applies modern political science perspectives to the Mississippi case. Recommended for advanced undergraduate and graduate collections. * Choice *
Mary DeLorse Coleman is associate professor of political science at Jackson State University, where she teaches public law and research methods. She received her PhD from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and spent one year in post-doctoral work at the University of Maryland-College Park. Dr. Coleman is currently at work on a study, Exits from Poverty in Multicultural Contexts. She is a native of Scott County, Mississippi.