
@article{ref1,
title="Women and American politics &quot;Mainstreaming&quot; at Kent State U",
journal="News for Teachers of Political Science",
year="1985",
author="Dean, Karen and Warner, Charles and Steuernagel, Trudy",
volume="44",
number="",
pages="8-9",
abstract="During the Spring Semester of 1984, we had the opportunity to field test Women in the Judicial Process and Men, Women, and State Violence: Government and the Military, two of the units in the American Political Science Association's project, Citizenship and Change: Women and American Politics. We greeted the experiment with great enthusiasm. Our current undergraduate curriculum includes the course &quot;Women and Politics&quot;; but, like many departments, we have given consideration to &quot;mainstreaming&quot; the contents of this class into other courses. Some of our faculty contend that &quot;Women and Politics&quot; perpetuates the &quot;ghettoization&quot; of such material and that our students would be better served by the abandonment of &quot;Women and Politics&quot; in favor of the integration of its content into our more traditional offerings.<p /><p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="0197-9019",
doi="10.1017/S0197901900003858",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0197901900003858"
}