182 research outputs found

    Precedential Value of Decisions of the Court of Appeals of the State of New Mexico

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    Constitutional Law -- Self-Incrimination -- Timeliness in Raising the Question

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    Constitutional Law -- Self-Incrimination -- Timeliness in Raising the Question

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    Workmen\u27s Compensation -- Receipt Concurrent with Unemployment Compensation

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    ULTA and USLTA in Coursebooks and Classrooms

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    1962 Amendments to the Florida Rules of Civil Procedure

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    Subjective Religiosity among African Americans: A Synthesis of Findings from Five National Samples

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    Demographic correlates of subjective religiosity are examined using data from five large national probability samples (i.e., Americans Changing Lives, n = 3,617; General Social Survey, n = 26,265; Monitoring the Future, n = 16,843; National Black Election Survey, n = 1,151; and National Survey of Black Americans, n = 2,107). In analyses of data involving both Black and White respondents, race emerges as a strong and consistent predictor of various indicators of subjective religiosity with Black Americans, indicating that they had significantly higher levels of subjective religiosity than Whites. Analyses using African American respondents only indicate that subjective religious involvement varies systematically by gender, age, region, and marital status. The findings are discussed in relation to research on religious participation among African Americans and future research and theory concerning the meaning of religion within discrete subgroups of this population.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/67324/2/10.1177_0095798499025004004.pd
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