References
- Employment Policies Institute. 1998. “The Baltimore Living Wage Study: Omissions, Fabrications, and Flaws.” Washington, D.C. Http://www.epionline.org/study_epi_batt_10_1998.htm.
- Employment Policies Institute. 2000a. “Enacted Initiatives.” Washington, D.C. Http://www.epionline.org/enacted.htm.
- Employment Policies Institute. 2000b. Living Wage Policy: The Basics. Washington, D.C.
- Fischer, Frank. 1995. Evaluating Public Policy. Chicago: Nelson-Hall.
- Fischer, Frank, and John Forester, eds. 1993. The Argumentative Turn in Policy Analysis and Planning. Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press.
- Glickman, Lawrence B. 1997. A Living Wage: American Workers and the Making of Consumer Society. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press.
- Hanke, Steve H. 1996. “Looks Like Charity, Smells Like Pork.” Forbes, May 6, 87.
- Levin-Waldman, Oren M. 1999. “The Rhetorical Evolution of the Minimum Wage.” The Jerome Levy Economics Institute, Working Paper no. 280. www.levy.org/docs/wkpap/papers/280.htm.
- Neidt, Christopher, Greg Ruiters, Dana Wise, and Erica Shoenberger. 1999. “The Effects of the Living Wage in Baltimore.” Washington, D.C.: Economic Policy Institute.
- Pollin, Robert, and Stephanie Luce. 1998. The Living Wage: Building a Fair Economy. New York: Free Press.
- Rawls, John. [1971] 1999. A Theory of Justice. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, Belnap Press.
- Ryan, John A. 1912. A Living Wage: Its Ethical and Economic Aspects. New York: Macmillan.
- Sabatier, Paul A. 1988. “An Advocacy Coalition Framework of Policy Change and the Role of Policy-oriented Learning Therein.” Policy Sciences 21: 129–168.
- Sabatier, Paul A., and Hank C. Jenkins-Smith, eds. 1993. Policy Change and Learning: An Advocacy Coalition Approach. Boulder: Westview.
- Sander, Richard, and Sean Lokey. 1998. “The Los Angeles Living Wage: The First Eighteen Months.” Los Angeles: UCLA/Fair Housing Institute.
- Schattschneider, E. E. 1960. The Semi-Sovereign People. New York: Holt, Rinehart & Winston.
- Stabile, Donald R. 1997. “Adam Smith and the Natural Wage: Sympathy, Subsistence, and Social Distance.” Review of Social Economy 55, no. 3: 292–320.
- Swope, Christopher. 1998. “The Living-Wage Wars.” Governing, December, 23–25.
- Tolley, George, Peter Bernstein, and Michael D. Lesage. 1996. “Economic Analysis of a Living Wage Ordinance.” Chicago: RCF Economic and Financial Consulting.
- Weisbrot, Mark, and Michelle Sforza-Roderick. 1996. “Baltimore’s Living Wage Law: An Analysis of the Fiscal and Economic Costs of Baltimore Ordinance 442.” Washington, D.C.: Preamble Center for Public Policy.
- Zundel, Alan F. 2000. Declarations of Dependency: The Civic Republican Tradition in U.S. Poverty Policy. Albany: State University of New York Press.
Selected Bibliography
- ACORN’s Living Wage Web Site. 2000. www.livingwagecampaign.org/introduction.html.
- AFSCME Web Site. 2000. http://www.afscme.org/livingwage.
- Bartlett, B., D. Packman, and D. Vaught. 1999. “The Living Wage: Two Views.” Nation’s Cities Weekly, August 30, 2.
- Cox, W. Michael, and Richard Aim. 2000. “Death by Living Wage.” IntellectualCapital.com. www.intellectualcapital.com/issues/issue387/item9855.asp.
- Employment Policies Institute Web Site. 2000. www.epionline.org.
- Employment Policy Foundation Web Site. 2000 www.epf.org/minimum_wage.htm.
- McGroatry, Daniel. 1999. “The Year of the Living Wage.” American Spectator, May, 52–53.
- Miller, Matthew. 1997. “Wages of Politics.” New Republic, February, 12–14.
- National Living Wage Campaign Web Site. 2000. www.igc.org/newparty/livwage/livwage.html.
- New Party Web Site. 2000. www.newparty.org.
- Pollin, Robert. 1998. “Living Wage, Live Action.” Nation, November 23. www.thirdworld-traveler.com/Economics/LivingWage_LiveAction.html.