Nonthematic Issue |
| Table of Contents | Notes on Contributors | Ordering information |
| H.W. Singer | Trends in Economic Thought on Underdevelopment |
| Ernest Hamburger | Constitutional Thought and Aims in Former French Africa |
| Party Discipline under Federalism: Implications of Australian Experience | |
| Fred R. von der Mehden and Charles W. Anderson | Political Action by the Military in the Developing Areas |
| Haskell P. Ward | Power Cliques in Bureaucratic Society (Note) |
| Harold M. Edelstein and Peter L. Bernstein | Forum--The Case Against Accelerated Depreciation |
Notes
on Contributors
(at
time of publication)
| Trends in Economic Thought on Underdevelopment H.W. Singer H.W. Singer is Special Adviser to the Under-Secretary for Economic and Social Affairs of the United Nations, and Visiting Professor of Economics in the Graduate Faculty of the New School. He has spent much time in the underdeveloped countries on behalf of the United Nations, and serves on the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa, in Addis Ababa. Constitutional Thought and Aims in Former French Africa Ernest Hamburger teaches in the Faculty of Law and Political Science of the Ecole Libre de Hautes Etudes, New York. Formerly he was First Officer of the Division of Human Rights in the United Nations, and Editor of the United Nations Yearbook on Human Rights. Party Discipline under Federalism: Implications of Australian Experience Aaron Wildavsky Aaron Wildavsky, Assistnat Professor of Government at Oberlin, spent 1954-55 in Australia as a Fulbright scholar. Apart from his writings on Australian political questions, his works include Dixon-Yates: A Study in Power Politics, published by Yale University Press. Political Action by the Military in the Developing Areas Fred R. von der Mehden Fred R. von der Mehden is Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of Wisconsin. His work on the developing areas centers especially on Southeast Asia, and he has recently completed a book on religion and nationalism in that area. Political Action by the Military in the Developing Areas Charles W. Anderson Charles W. Anderson, like his co-author, is Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of Wisconsin. The politics and development policies of Latin America are his primary research interest, and at present he is engaged in a political analysis of development banking in Mexico. |
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