Skip to main content

The COVID-19 crisis forced many states to postpone primary elections and/or hold them mostly by mail. Yet most Americans are not accustomed to voting by mail (VBM). Previous research suggests that barriers to voting by mail already exist for communities of color and immigrants, and data from elections held during the COVID-19 pandemic confirm that people of color return mail ballots at lower rates than whites.

Cover image of the book Studies in Social Policy and Planning
Books

Studies in Social Policy and Planning

Companion volume to Theory and Practice of Social Planning
Author
Alfred J. Kahn
Ebook
Publication Date
340 pages

About This Book

From the preface: “The present work and a simultaneously published companion volume, Theory and Practice of Social Planning, share an overall goal. They would conceptualize and illustrate both specialized planning for social programs or fields and the social aspects of more general planning endeavors. Of particular concern here is the demonstration through use of a number of critical planning concepts often discussed only in the abstract. Author and reader, of course, are concerned with specific policies and with programs in specific fields. The studies presented – they are short monographs rather than true chapters – introduce issues and problems in a variety of high-priority areas. The specific rationale for selection and the manner in which each study is employed are discussed in the first chapter.” Topics include: the anti-poverty war, child delinquency, income security, city renewal, community psychiatry, and the delivery of social services at the local level.

ALFRED J. KAHN was professor of Social Policy and Planning at the Columbia University School of Social Work.

RSF Journal
View Book Series
Sign Up For Our Mailing List
Apply For Funding
Cover image of the book Philanthropic Foundations
Books

Philanthropic Foundations

Author
F. Emerson Andrews
Ebook
Publication Date
462 pages

About This Book

This study deals with philanthropic foundations: their types, organization, boards of trustees, finances, professional staff, methods of operation, grant programs, areas of interest, reporting and publicity, and legal problems. It is based on extensive interviews, correspondence, questionnaires, examination of the literature in the field, and its author’s long experience with the Russell Sage Foundation and as consultant and adviser to other foundations and philanthropic organizations. It is designed to assistant foundations and to serve as an aid to prospective donors and their advisers in setting up such institutions.

F. Emerson Andrews was director of publications at the Russell Sage Foundation.

RSF Journal
View Book Series
Sign Up For Our Mailing List
Apply For Funding
Cover image of the book Law, Society, and Industrial Justice
Books

Law, Society, and Industrial Justice

Author
Philip Selznick
Ebook
Publication Date
290 pages

About This Book

This is a study of industrial organization, viewed in the light of moral and legal evolution. This  book explores a number of themes in the sociology of law, including: the relevance of legal theory to private non-state institutions, the nature of legality and its social foundations, incipient and inchoate law, legal cognition, and the relation between law and politics. These general topics are explored in regard to the extension of the rule of law to modern industrial employment.

Philip Selznick was professor of sociology and law at the University of California, Berkeley.

RSF Journal
View Book Series
Sign Up For Our Mailing List
Apply For Funding
Cover image of the book The Transportation Problem in American Social Work
Books

The Transportation Problem in American Social Work

Including an Account of the Origin and Development of The Transportation Agreement
Author
Jeffrey R. Brackett
Ebook
Publication Date
38 pages

About This Book

This pamphlet reviews the work of the National Conference of Charities and Correction, as well as the National Conference of Jewish Charities, in regard to relief and care for the homeless. It was written while the Transient Division of the Federal Emergency Relief Administration, the first nationwide program for the care of the homeless, was in operation.

Jeffrey R. Brackett was chairman of advisory board, Massachusetts Department of Public Welfare.

RSF Journal
View Book Series
Sign Up For Our Mailing List
Apply For Funding
Cover image of the book Postponing Strikes
Books

Postponing Strikes

A Study of the Industrial Disputes Investigation Act of Canada
Author
Ben M. Selekman
Ebook
Publication Date
404 pages

About This Book

An extension of the 1916 “Industrial Disputes and the Canadian Act, Facts about Nine Years’ Experience with Compulsory Investigation in Canada” pamphlet, with a focus on whether the Canadian Industrial Disputes Investigation Act could be replicated in the United States.

Ben M. Selekman, Department of Industrial Studies, Russell Sage Foundation

RSF Journal
View Book Series
Sign Up For Our Mailing List
Apply For Funding
Cover image of the book What Public Officials Say
Books

What Public Officials Say

Who Have Tried the Transportation Agreement
Author
The Charity Organization Department of the Russell Sage Foundation
Ebook
Publication Date
8 pages

About This Book

A report on the adoption of the Transportation Agreement, with contributions from Alexander M. Wilson, assistant director of the Department of Public Health and Charities of Philadelphia; Mabel Tibbot, overseer of the poor, Fort Dodge, Iowa; George S. Wilson, secretary of the Board of Charities, District of Columbia; and the State Board of Charities of Missouri, in a “Letter of Advice to County Courts.”

RSF Journal
View Book Series
Sign Up For Our Mailing List
Apply For Funding

Police officers make decisions each day to stop and search civilians, with important consequences for public safety, civil liberties, and relationships between law enforcement agencies and the communities they serve. Identifying the effects of police stop, question, and frisk (SQF) practices is challenging due to data limitations, and the empirical evidence to date has been mixed.

Economist Elliott Ash and colleagues will examine how and the extent to which attitudes toward gender affect decision-making in the judicial system. They will address the measurement challenge by exploiting the large corpus of written text for appellate judges, arguing that text can provide important insights into human social psychology. The PIs will proxy judges’ attitudes toward gender by measuring the degree of language slant that is displayed by their writing.