Lexington Books
Pages: 292
Trim: 6⅜ x 9½
978-0-7391-2716-2 • Hardback • March 2010 • $142.00 • (£109.00)
978-0-7391-2717-9 • Paperback • March 2010 • $57.99 • (£45.00)
978-0-7391-4435-0 • eBook • March 2010 • $55.00 • (£42.00)
Ronald W. Walters is director of the African American Leadership Institute and professor of government and politics at the University of Maryland. His many books include Black Presidential Politics, winner of the American Political Science Association's Ralph Bunche Prize and White Nationalism, Black Interests, an 'academic best seller,' covered by C-SPAN. Toni-Michelle Travis is an associate professor and Program Director of African American Studies at George Mason University. She is the faculty representative to the Board of Visitors' Committee on Equity and Diversity. She has been a member of the Public and International Affairs Department since 1984.
Chapter 1 Foreword
Chapter 2 1. Introduction: An Administered System of Government
Chapter 3 2. Home Rule for Washington, D.C.
Chapter 4 3. Walter Washington: Mayor Of the Last Colony
Chapter 5 4. Marion Barry: A Politician for the Times
Chapter 6 5. Sharon Pratt Kelly: The Reform Mayor
Chapter 7 6. The High Tide of Pragmatic Black Politics: Mayor Anthony Williams and the Suppression of Black Interests
Chapter 8 7. The Mayor as the Head School Master
Chapter 9 8. Can Washington, D.C. Youth Speak?
Chapter 10 9. Banished Housing Policy
Chapter 11 10. Democracy and Its Impact on Rehabilitative Resources
Chapter 12 11. The Dynamics of Poverty in the District of Columbia
Chapter 13 12. Communicating Liberation
Chapter 14 13. Conclusion
The struggle for full democratic self-government and for full congressional voting rights in the House continues unabated… These authors take a fresh look at how the first elected officials to govern the District of Columbia defined self-government for the city amidst the problems and dilemmas they found. The nation should be grateful to these authors for what their insights tell us about government in the modern nation's capital and, inadvertently, about the nature of governing in the nation itself.
— Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton, Delegate of the District of Columbia, from the foreword
This volume is very timely as it offers the reader a case study of the struggle for full democracy in the Nation's capital at a time when the United States is actively seeking to establish and promote democracy internationally. This volume offers important insights into the successes and failures of executive leadership in the District of Columbia thereby providing students of political science and governance a wealth of case materials not previously available. Most important, this volume show cases the political conflicts in the city's struggle to achieve control over its governance and to achieve local representation for its residents.
— Stephen S. Fuller, Director, Center for Regional Analysis, George Mason University
The Declaration of Independence asserts that governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed, but American citizens who live in the District of Columbia see their elected local government overruled by a Congress in which they have no voting representative. This impressive anthology explains why the District achieved only limited home rule in 1973, and how this anomalous form of local government has shaped a wide range of public policies ever since.
— Zachary M. Schrag, author of The Great Society Subway: A History of the Washington Metro
The essays contained in this volume are at once timely and revealing. They explain in penetrating detail why Washington D. C. is often referred to as the "last colony." Using a combination of case studies and probing policy analysis, this volume shatters the myth that city governance in Washington is impossible without the intervention of the heavy hand of the federal government. The contributors to this volume demonstrate convincingly that as long as racism is an omnipresent and highly institutionalized factor in the administration of city affairs in Washington, the absence of home rule and self government in the nation's capital will continue to resound as a problem in democracy for the United States as a whole. This volume is long overdue. It should be essential reading for every federal official and local politician involved in the shaping of the city's future.
— William E. Nelson, Ohio State University
Every American has a responsibility to understand the unique challenges facing our federal capital—particularly because the citizens of Washington, D.C. do not have their own fully empowered representation in Congress. Respected scholars Ronald Walters and Toni-Michelle Travis have assembled a superb group of contributors who present us with the unvarnished truth about D.C. And the truth is the first step to solving some of the intractable problems that plague both the District and the entire nation.
— Larry J. Sabato, director, University of Virginia Center for Politics and author of The Kenneday Half-Century