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Second treatise of government

John Locke
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TLDR
In this paper, the Kimberly Nixon Case Statement for Social Service Agencies and Transsexual/Transgendered Organisations on Service Delivery to Transsexual and Transvestite Prostitutes is discussed.
Abstract
Introduction Making the Lives of Transsexual People Visible: Addressing the Politics of Social Erasure Sex Change, Social Change: Reflections on Identity and Institutions Transsexuals Behind Bars Beyond Image Content: Examining Transsexuals' Access to the Media Inclusive Pedagogy in the Women's Studies Classroom: Teaching the Kimberly Nixon Case Statement for Social Service Agencies and Transsexual/Transgendered Organisations on Service Delivery to Transsexual and Transvestite Prostitutes Interview with Mirha-Soleil Ross Against Transgender Rights: Understanding the Imperialism of Contemporary Transgender Politics Conclusion.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The Authority for Federalism: Madison's Negative and the Origins of Federal Ideology

TL;DR: The Philadelphia convention of 1787 looms enormous in many accounts of U.S. constitutional history, serving as the set piece in which various and muddled worldviews, theories, interests, and allegiances gelled into a coherent science and structure of politics as mentioned in this paper.
Dissertation

Promising America: Imagining Democracy, Democratizing Imagination

TL;DR: Promising America: Imagining Democracy, Democratizing Imagination by Laura Kathleen Grattan Department of Political Science Duke University Date:_______________________ Approved: ___________________________ J. Peter Euben, Co-chair as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Origins and Development of Executive Branch Czars

Abstract: Th e problems that President Barack Obama inherited when he took offi ce in 2009—two wars abroad, and at home an economic crisis with possible collapse of the auto industry, the meltdown of the banking sector and housing market—generated expectations that he would take resolute action. With strong partisan majorities in Congress and the traditional leeway in public opinion during the “honeymoon” period, Obama had an unusual combination of circumstances that enabled him to act boldly on a number of policy fronts. During actual and perceived crises, there is little sentiment to constrain a president’s powers. Obama acted quickly and put into place a number of offi cials who could assist in responding to crises by coordinating policy responses within the executive branch. Some of those offi cials have been commonly referred to as “czars” and they have become controversial given that they are usually in unconfi rmed positions and yet exercise considerable powers. For example, to deal with the eff ects of the automobile industry fi nancial crisis in March 2009, Obama appointed an auto recovery czar, Ed Montgomery. 1
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