Murray, Charles A.
Enlarge text Shrink text- His The national evaluation of the Pilot Cities Program, 1975 i.e. 1976:t.p. (Charrles A. Murray)
- His Losing ground, c1984:t.p. (Charles Murray)
- The emerging underclass, 1990:t.p. (Charles Murray) p.xii (social scientist and writer; has been researcher in rural Thailand, and senior scientist at American Institutes for Research; works incl. Apollo: the race to the moon)
- Info. converted from 678, 2012-10-02(b. 1/8/43)
- Human diversity, 2020:title page (Charles Murray) dust cover (W.H. Brady. Scholar, American Enterprise Institute. Publications: Losing Ground, 1984; Coming Apart, 2012. He lives in Burkittsville, Maryland)
- LCN ; note: b. 1943
Charles Alan Murray (; born January 8, 1943) is an American political scientist. He is the W.H. Brady Scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank in Washington, D.C. Murray's work is highly controversial. His book Losing Ground: American Social Policy, 1950–1980 (1984) discussed the American welfare system. In the book The Bell Curve (1994), he and co-author Richard Herrnstein argue that in 20th-century American society, intelligence became a better predictor than parental socioeconomic status or education level of many individual outcomes, including income, job performance, pregnancy out of wedlock, and crime, and that social welfare programs and education efforts to improve social outcomes for the disadvantaged are largely counterproductive. The Bell Curve also argues that average intelligence quotient (IQ) differences between racial and ethnic groups are at least partly genetic in origin, a view that is now considered discredited by mainstream science.
Read more on Wikipedia >