Redistributive change (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Redistributive change" in English language version.

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boston.com (Global: 310th place; English: 208th place)

csmonitor.com (Global: 791st place; English: 550th place)

features.csmonitor.com

nytimes.com (Global: 7th place; English: 7th place)

salon.com (Global: 456th place; English: 300th place)

slate.com (Global: 259th place; English: 188th place)

  • Bazelon, Emily (2008-10-28). "He's Not Robin Hood: What Obama really meant by "redistributive change."". Slate.

washingtonpost.com (Global: 34th place; English: 27th place)

voices.washingtonpost.com

wbez.org (Global: 9,766th place; English: 5,383rd place)

  • Helfrich, Gretchen; Susan Bandes; Dennis Hutchinson; Barack Obama (2001-01-18). "The Court and Civil Rights". Chicago Public Radio. Archived from the original on 2004-02-24. A classic example would be something like public education, where after Brown v. Board, a major issue ends up being redistribution -- how do we get more money into the schools, and how do we actually create equal schools and equal educational opportunity? Well, the court in a case called San Antonio v. Rodriguez in the early '70s basically slaps those kinds of claims down, and says, 'You know what, we as a court have no power to examine issues of redistribution and wealth inequalities. With respect to schools, that's not a race issue, that's a wealth issue and something we can't get into.'

web.archive.org (Global: 1st place; English: 1st place)

  • Helfrich, Gretchen; Susan Bandes; Dennis Hutchinson; Barack Obama (2001-01-18). "The Court and Civil Rights". Chicago Public Radio. Archived from the original on 2004-02-24. A classic example would be something like public education, where after Brown v. Board, a major issue ends up being redistribution -- how do we get more money into the schools, and how do we actually create equal schools and equal educational opportunity? Well, the court in a case called San Antonio v. Rodriguez in the early '70s basically slaps those kinds of claims down, and says, 'You know what, we as a court have no power to examine issues of redistribution and wealth inequalities. With respect to schools, that's not a race issue, that's a wealth issue and something we can't get into.'
  • Eilperin, Juliet; Alice Crites (2008-10-28). "Palin Takes Issue, Liberally, With '01 Obama Remarks". Washington Post. Archived from the original on February 24, 2012.