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Journal ArticleDOI

The Repeal of Fair Housing in California: An Analysis of Referendum Voting*

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TLDR
In the summer of 1963, the California legislature passed the Rumford Act, which prohibited racial discrimination by realtors and the owners of apartment houses and homes built with public assistance.
Abstract
In the summer of 1963 the California legislature passed the Rumford Act, prohibiting racial discrimination by realtors and the owners of apartment houses and homes built with public assistance. California real estate and property management interests, which had fought the Act's passage, then placed on the November 1964 ballot an initiative provision (Proposition 14) that would amend the state constitution to repeal the Rumford Act and prevent the state or any locality within it from adopting any fair housing legislation. During most of 1964 intense and lavishly financed campaigns were fought by supporters and opponents of Proposition 14. Almost 96 per cent of the people who turned out on election day voted on the measure, which passed by a ratio of two to one. In one sense the campaign and balloting were an exercise in futility, for in May of 1967 the United States Supreme Court declared Proposition 14 unconstitutional. Some short-term consequences of its passage were apparent, however. For several years there was a severe weakening of legal sanctions against racial discrimination in housing, resulting in abandonment of many cases that were underway before the 1964 election. For eighteen months the federal government froze $120 million in funds for California urban renewal projects. Less tangibly, it is claimed that the proposition's overwhelming popularity contributed to the Watts riots and other racial violence in California.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Citizen Participation and Environmental Risk: A Survey of Institutional Mechanisms:

TL;DR: A survey of five institutional mechanisms for allowing the lay public to influence environmental risk decisions: public hearings, initiatives, public surveys, negotiated rule making, and citizens review panels is presented in this paper.
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Putting Civil Rights to a Popular Vote

TL;DR: The authors analyzes over three decades of initiatives and popular referenda from five major civil rights areas: housing and public accommodations for racial minorities, school desegregation, gay rights, English language laws, and AIDS policies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Race/Ethnicity and Direct Democracy: An Analysis of California's Illegal Immigration Initiative

TL;DR: The role of racial/ethnic diversity in county-level support for California's illegal immigration initiative (Proposition 187) was examined in this article, where the authors conceptualized California counties in terms of their homogeneous, heterogeneous, or bifurcated racial and ethnic composition.

A Research Project to Determine the Student Acceptability and Learning Effectiveness of Microform Collections in Community Colleges: Phase I, Final Report.

Louise Giles
TL;DR: Giles et al. as discussed by the authors reported on the first phase of a 3-phase project to determine student acceptance of microform, and on the effectiveness of microforms for learning.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nondecisions and the Study of Local Politics

TL;DR: The lack of research on nondecisions reflects the concept's weaknesses as a guide to field research: (1) It involves a number of unrealistic assumptions about political life; (2) It requires data that are difficult to gather or wholly unobtainable; and (3) Even the data that can be collected do not provide a basis for sensible conclusions about the distribution of political power.
References
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Book

A preface to democratic theory

TL;DR: Dahl's "A Preface to Democratic Theory" as mentioned in this paper examines two influential models the Madisonian, which represents prevailing American doctrine, and its recurring challenger, populist theory arguing that they do not accurately portray how modern democracies operate.
Book

An American Dilemma

Gunnar Myrdal
TL;DR: There is a "Negro problem" in the United States and most Americans are aware of it, although it assumes varying forms and intensity in different regions of the country and among diverse groups of the American people.
Journal ArticleDOI

Party government and the saliency of congress

TL;DR: Stokes and Miller as mentioned in this paper studied the extent to which public reactions to the legislative records of the major parties influence voter's choices among party candidates at mid-term congressional elections and found that public reaction to the records of major parties influenced voter's choice of candidates.