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[Download] "Redressing Information Inequality Through Social Justice Research: The Case of Environmental Justice (Essay)" by Public Administration Quarterly * Book PDF Kindle ePub Free

Redressing Information Inequality Through Social Justice Research: The Case of Environmental Justice (Essay)

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eBook details

  • Title: Redressing Information Inequality Through Social Justice Research: The Case of Environmental Justice (Essay)
  • Author : Public Administration Quarterly
  • Release Date : January 22, 2009
  • Genre: Law,Books,Professional & Technical,
  • Pages : * pages
  • Size : 299 KB

Description

INTRODUCTION A 2004 symposium issue of the International Journal of Public Administration explored the maturation of the field of public administration. In this issue Richard Johnson criticized the discipline for taking a narrow approach to questions of diversity and social equity by concentrating on issues of race and gender. He suggested the discipline refocus its efforts to include class-related research (Johnson, 2004) Other authors have documented the extent to which public administration research has focused on race and gender while neglecting social class (and sexual orientation). Oldfield, Chandler, and Johnson (2004) conducted a four country review (Australia, Brazil, Canada, United States) of public administration literature and found nearly all the social equity articles focused on race and gender with little attention to social class. The explanations offered for the lack of research on social class range from class bias in higher education to the "professionalization" of public administration. These authors have argued that low-income families are the most underrepresented group at major universities. This is true among both students and faculty, few of whom have significant personal experience with issues of social class (Oldfield, Chandler, & Johnson, 2004, p. 165-166) The authors also argue that because "professionalization [of public administration] promotes and responds to the needs of the state, it can and often does set the permissible limits of scholarly debate." Consequently, there is an almost total neglect of (or relative silence about) the distribution of wealth in a "society of unequal social classes?" (Johnson, 2003, p. 512). While community activists often find this frustrating, understanding the source of the problem is essential to reframing appeals for greater attention to issues of social equity.


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