LeeBadgett M.V., and WilliamsRhonda M.. (1992). “The Economics of Sexual Orientation: Establishing a Research Agenda,”Feminist Studies, Vol. 18(3), pp. 649–657.
2.
LeeBadgett M.V., and WilliamsRhonda M.. (1994). “The Changing Contours of Discrimination: Race, Gender, and Structural Economic Change,” in BernsteinMichael A., and AdlerDavid E. (eds.) Understanding American Economic Decline.Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 313–329.
3.
BotwinickHoward (1993). Persistent Inequalities: Wage Disparity Under Capitalist Competition.Princeton: Princeton University Press.
4.
BurbridgeLynn C. (1997). “Black Women in the History of African American Economic Thought,” in BostonThomas D. (ed.) A Different Vision: African American Economic Thought, vol. one. London: Routledge, pp. 101–122.
5.
CallariAntonio, CullenbergStephen, and BiewenerCarole, eds. (1995). Marxism in the Postmodern Age: Confronting the New World Order.New York: The Guilford Press.
6.
CherryRobert (1988). “Shifts in Radical Theories of Inequality,”Review of Radical Political Economics, Vol. 20(2/3), pp. 33–57.
7.
CherryRobert (1989). Discrimination: Its Economic Impact on Blacks, Women, and Jews.Lexington, MA: D.C. Heath and Company.
8.
CornwallRichard R., and WunnavaPhanindra V., eds. (1991). New Approaches to Economic and Social Analyses of Discrimination.Westport, CT: Praeger.
9.
DarityWilliam A.Jr., ed. (1995). Economics and Discrimination, 1 vols. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar.
10.
DarityWilliam A.Jr., and WilliamsRhonda M.. (1985). “Peddlers Forever? Culture, Competition, and Discrimination,”American Economic Review, Vol. 75(2), pp. 256–261.
11.
GordonDavid M., EdwardsRichard, and ReichMichael. (1982). Segmented Work, Divided Workers: The Historical Transformation of Labor in the United States.Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
12.
MasonPatrick L. (1997). “Some Heterodox Models of Inequality in the Market for Labor Power,” in BostonThomas D. (ed.) A Different Vision: African American Economic Thought, vol. two. London: Routledge, pp. 350–379.
13.
MasonPatrick L., and WilliamsRhonda M.. (1997a). “The Janus Face of Race-Reflections on Economic Theory,” in MasonPatrick L., and WilliamsRhonda M. (eds.) Race, Markets, and Social Outcomes.Boston: Kluwer-Nijhoff, pp. 1–12.
14.
MasonPatrick L., and WilliamsRhonda M. eds. (1997b). Race, Markets, and Social Outcomes.Norwell, MA: Kluwer Academic Publishers.
15.
MyersSamuel L.Jr., ChanTsze, and WilliamsRhonda M.. (1990). “Income Inequality: Comparisons of Maryland and the United States,”Maryland Policy Studies, n. 2 (August), pp. 24–33.
16.
OmiMichael, and WinantHoward. (1986). Racial Formation in the United States: From the 1960's to the !980's.New York: Routledge and Kegan Paul.
17.
ReichMichael (1981). Racial Inequality: A Political-Economic Analysis.Princeton: Princeton University Press.
18.
ShulmanSteve (1990). “Racial Inequality and White Employment: An Interpretation and Test of the Bargaining Power Hypothesis,”The Review of Black Political Economy, Vol. 18(3), pp. 5–20.
19.
SimmsMargaret C., and MalveauxJulianne M. eds. 1986. Slipping Through the Cracks: The Status of Black Women.New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Books.
20.
SpriggsWilliam E., and WilliamsRhonda M.. (1996). “A Logit Decomposition Analysis of Occupational Segregation: Results for the 1970s and 1980s,”The Review of Economics and Statistics, Vol. 78(2), pp. 348–355.
21.
SpriggsWilliam E., and WilliamsRhonda M.. (2000). “What Do We Need to Explain About African-American Unemployment?” in CherryRobert, and RodgersWilliam M.III (eds.) Prosperity for All? The Economic Boom and African Americans.New York: Russell Sage Foundation, pp. 188–207.
22.
StroberMyra H., FerberMarianne A., and RhondaM. Williams, guest editors. (1998). Employment and Inequality in the U.S., special issue ofFeminist Economics, Vol. 4(3).
23.
WilliamsRhonda M. (1984). “The Methodology and Practice of Modern Labor Economics: A Critique,” in DarityWilliamJr. (ed.) Labor Economics: Modern Views.Boston: Kluwer-Nijhoff, pp. 23–51.
24.
WilliamsRhonda M. (1987a). “Capital, Competition, and Discrimination: A Reconsideration of Racial Earnings Inequality,”Review of Radical Political Economics, Vol. 19(2), pp. 1–15.
25.
WilliamsRhonda M. (1987b). “Culture as Human Capital: Methodological and Policy Implications,”Praxis International, Vol. 7(2), pp. 152–163.
26.
WilliamsRhonda M. (1988). “Beyond Human Capital: Black Women, Work and Wages,” Working Paper 183. Wellesley, MA: Wellesley Center for Research on Women.
27.
WilliamsRhonda M. (1990). “Beyond ‘Bad Luck’: The Racial Dimensions of Deindustrialization,” Technical Paper. Washington, DC: Joint Center for Political Studies.
28.
WilliamsRhonda M. (1991). “Competition, Discrimination, and Differential Wage Rates: On the Continued Relevance of Marxian Theory to the Analysis of Earnings and Employment Inequality,” in CornwallRichard R., and WunnavaPhanindra V. (eds.) New Approaches to the Economic and Social Analyses of Discrimination.Westport, CT: Praeger, pp. 65–92.
29.
WilliamsRhonda M. (1993a). “Accumulation as Evisceration: Urban Rebellion and the New Growth Dynamic,” in Gooding-WilliamsRobert (ed.) Reading Rodney King, Reading Urban Uprising.New York: Routledge, pp. 82–96.
30.
WilliamsRhonda M. (1993b). “Race, Deconstruction, and the Emergent Agenda of Feminist Economic Theory,” in FerberMarianne A., and NelsonJulie A. (eds.) Beyond Economic Man: Feminist Theory and Economics.Chicago: University of Chicago Press, pp. 144–153.
31.
WilliamsRhonda M. (1993c). “Racial Inequality and Racial Conflict: Recent Developments in Radical Theory,” in DarityWilliamJr. (ed.) Labor Economics: Problems in Analyzing Labor Markets.Norwell, MA: Kluwer Academic Publishers, pp. 209–235.
32.
WilliamsRhonda M. (1994). “Theoretical Explanations of Persistent Black Youth Unemployment,”Trotter Review, Spring, pp. 18–20.
33.
WilliamsRhonda M. (1995). “Consenting to Whiteness: Reflections on Race and Marxian Theories of Discrimination,” in CallariAntonio, CullenbergStephen, and BiewenerCarole (eds.) Marxism and the Postmodern Age.New York: The Guilford Press, pp. 301–308.
34.
WilliamsRhonda M. (1996). “Culturally Bereft, Naturally Unfit: African Americans and the Current Social Policy,”Journal of Intergroup Relations, Vol. 23(4), pp. 3–8.
35.
WilliamsRhonda M. (1997). “Living at the Crossroads: Explorations in Race, Nationality, Sexuality, and Gender,” in LubianoWahneema (ed.) The House That Race Built: Black Americans, U.S. Terrain.New York: Random House, pp. 136–156.
36.
WilliamsRhonda M. (1999a). “Race in Political Economy: Major Contemporary Themes,” in O'HaraPhillip Anthony (ed.) Encyclopedia of Political Economy.London: Routledge, pp. 948–951.
37.
WilliamsRhonda M. (1999b). “Unfinished Business: African-American Political Economy During the Age of ‘Color-Blind’ Politics,” in The State of Black America, 1999.New York: The National Urban League, pp. 137–151.
38.
WilliamsRhonda M. (2000). “If You're Black, Get Back; If You're Brown, Stick Around; If You're White, Hang Tight: Race, Gender, and Work in the Global Economy.”Washington, DC: The Preamble Center for Public Policy.
39.
WilliamsRhonda M. (2001). “Being Queer, Being Black: Living Out in Afro-American Studies,” in GarnerShirley (ed.) Is Academic Feminism Dead?New York: New York University Press.
40.
WilliamsRhonda M., and KenisonRobert E.. (1996). “The Way We Were?: Discrimination, Competition, and Inter-industry Wage Differentials in 1970,”Review of Radical Political Economics, Vol. 28(2), pp. 1–32.
41.
WilliamsRhonda M., and PetersonCarla L.. (1998). “The Color of Memory: Interpreting Twentieth-Century U.S. Social Policy from a Nineteenth-Century Perspective,”Feminist Studies, Vol. 24(1), pp. 7–25.
42.
WilliamsRhonda M., and SmithPeggie R.. (1990). “What Else Do Unions Do?: Race and Gender in Local 35,”The Review of Black Political Economy, Vol. 18(3), pp. 59–77.
43.
WilliamsRhonda M., and SpriggsWilliam E.. (1999). “How Does It Feel to Be Free?: Reflections on Black-White Economic Inequality in the Era of ‘Color-Blind’ Law,”The Review of Black Political Economy, Vol. 27(1), pp. 9–21.