Spelling suggestions: "subject:"arizona apolitics"" "subject:"arizona bpolitics""
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John C. Greenway and the Bull Moose Movement in ArizonaHunter, George Stanford, 1939- January 1966 (has links)
No description available.
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Marcus A. Smith, Arizona politicianFazio, Steven Adolph January 1968 (has links)
No description available.
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From Prophet to Pharisee: An Analysis of Arizona Christian Politicians, Political Theory, and TheologyJanuary 2014 (has links)
abstract: Contemporary Christian American politicians have diverse identities when integrating their faith with their political ideology and have developed their worldviews and interpretive schemas and have defended, enacted, and given meaning to their positions, knowingly or unknowingly. There are two distinct theoretical clusters which are a result of an already existing dichotomy. This ideological divide happens along the philosophical notions of individualism or communitarianism, libertarianism or egalitarianism, capitalism or collectivism, literalism or hermeneutics, orthodoxy or praxis. One cluster, Institutional Christianity, exerts a dominating influence on the political and cultural landscape in the US, particularly during the last ten years, and could be considered a hegemonic discourse; while the other, Natural Christianity, serves as the counter-hegemony within a political landscape characterized by a two party system. This study explores the relationship of these dichotomous clusters with contemporary Arizona Christian politicians. Using a phenomenological, qualitative study, interviewing sixteen Arizona Christian politicians, this study yielded ten themes, and binary meaning units within each theme, that describe the essence of politicians' faith and political behavior as they intersect. Finally, this study found, as reported by each subject, what political perspectives generally created a sense of dissonance with one's faith and what perspective exhibited a unified sense of congruence with their faith and political behavior. / Dissertation/Thesis / Ph.D. Justice Studies 2014
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