Can
Charitable Choice Work?:
Covering Religion’s Impact on Urban Affairs
and Social Services
Edited by Andrew Walsh, Associate Director of the Greenberg
Center
(Hartford, CT: Pew Program on Religion and the News Media
and the Leonard E. Greenberg Center for the Study of Religion in Public
Life, 2001).
TABLE OF CONTENTS
(Links to individual chapters require Acrobat
Reader)
ABOUT THE CONTRIBUTORS
INTRODUCTION
Andrew Walsh
CHAPTER I
Still Gathering After All These Years: Congregations In Us Cities
By Nancy T. Ammerman
CHAPTER II
Religion and Regional Culture In Modern America
By Jan Shipps
CHAPTER III
After The Urban Exodus: Jews, Protestants and The Erosion Of Catholic
Exceptionalism, 1950-2000.
By Gerald Gamm
CHAPTER IV
Latino Catholics and American Public Life
By Timothy Matovina
CHAPTER V
Historical Perspectives On Religion, Government and Social
Welfare In America
By Peter Dobkin Hall
CHAPTER VI
Religious Congregations and Welfare Reform: Assessing the
Potential
By Mark Chaves
CHAPTER VII
Black Churches and Civic Traditions: Outreach, Activism, and the
Politics of Public Funding of Faith-Based Ministries
By Fredrick C. Harris
CHAPTER VIII
Charitable Choice: The Law As It Is and May Be
By Marc D. Stern
APPENDIX
Articles on Charitable Choice by Staff of the Greenberg Center:
Dennis R. Hoover, "Yes to Charitable Choice"
The Nation, August 7/14, 2000, pp. 6-7, 28.
Mark Silk, "Old Alliance, New Ground Rules" Washington
Post, February 18, 2001, Outlook; p. B3.
Dennis R. Hoover, "Faith-based Update: Bipartisan Breakdown"
Religion in the News, Vol. 4 No. 2, Summer 2001, pp. 14-18.
The
opinions expressed in this publication are those of the authors and do
not necessarily reflect the views of the Pew Charitable Trusts.
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