The Political Economy of Ethnic Discrimination and Affirmative Action: A Comparative Perspective

The Political Economy of Ethnic Discrimination and Affirmative Action: A Comparative Perspective

by Michael L. Wyzan
The Political Economy of Ethnic Discrimination and Affirmative Action: A Comparative Perspective

The Political Economy of Ethnic Discrimination and Affirmative Action: A Comparative Perspective

by Michael L. Wyzan

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Overview

The nine essays collected here examine ethnic relations, discrimination, and affirmative action in different regions of the world. The contributors focus throughout on the political economy of ethnic relations - an area that has until now been largely neglected in the literature. Written by economists, the papers both offer theoretical and empirical insights into standard neoclassical models of discrimination and explore in depth the historical and institutional features of the specific cases under study. Six of the papers address discrimination and affirmative action in developing countries; the remaining essays examine the problem as it has been manifested in socialist states. The aim throughout is to offer the reader an enhanced understanding of the economic and political genesis of the often catastrophic problems associated with ethnic discrimination.

Following a general introduction by the editor, the contributors examine relations between Arabs and Jews in the Israeli labor force; the complex interactions between human rights, affirmative action, and land reform in Latin America; and ethnic relations and the new economic policy in Malaysia. The three additional studies of ethnic problems in developing countries look at apartheid in South Africa, political and economic discrimination in Sri Lanka, and ethnic conflict in the Sudan. Turbaning to an examination of ethnic discrimination under communism, the contributors analyze the problems faced by gypsies in Eastern Europe, the politics of ethnicity and affirmative action in the Soviet Union, and labor market discrimination and ethnic tension in Yugoslavia. A bibliography is included for those wishing to pursue further research on the subject. By focusing attention on discrimination in regions of the world little studied in past works on ethnic conflict, these essays represent a unique and important contribution to the literature of international economics and political economy.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780275933340
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 10/19/1990
Series: Intercultural Communciation
Pages: 288
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.69(d)

About the Author

MICHAEL L. WYZAN is Associate Professor of Economics at Illinois State University.

Table of Contents

Foreword by Barry R. Chiswick
Preface
Introduction by Michael L. Wyzan
Arabs and Jews in the Israeli Labor Force: A Comparison of Education and Earnings by Ruth Klinov
Human Rights, Affirmative Action, and Land Reform in Latin America by William C. Thiesenhusen
Ethnic Relations and the New Economic Policy in Malaysia by Michael L. Wyzan
Will Economic Sanctions End Apartheid in South Africa? What Simple Analytical Models Can Tell Us by Mats Lundahl
Political and Economic Discrimination in Sri Lanka by L. Kenneth Hubbell
Ethnic Conflict in the Sudan by Adil Eltigani Ali Abdalla
Discrimination against and Affirmative Action for Gypsies in Eastern Europe by Lynn Turgeon
The Politics of Ethnicity and Affirmative Action in the Soviet Union by Zvi Gitelman
Labor Market Discrimination and Ethnic Tension in Yugoslavia: The Case of Kosovo by Will Bartlett
Bibliography
Index

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