This book shows that party polarization in America is the norm, not the exception, and is rooted in class-based conflict characterizing all of American history.
This book shows that party polarization in America is the norm, not the exception, and is rooted in class-based conflict characterizing all of American history.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
B. Dan Wood's other books include Presidential Saber Rattling (Cambridge, 2012), The Myth of Presidential Representation (Cambridge, 2009, and recipient of the 2010 Richard Neustadt Award), The Politics of Economic Leadership (2007), and Bureaucratic Dynamics: The Role of Bureaucracy in a Democracy (1994). He is a widely cited author of many articles in leading political science journals. Wood has also taught statistical methods at the Essex Summer School, Colchester, the Interuniversity Consortium for Political and Social Research, University of Michigan, and the European Consortium for Political Research, Vienna, Austria.
Inhaltsangabe
1. Theoretical perspectives on party polarization in America 2. Establishing the founders' social contract from the constitutional convention through George Washington 3. The consequences of the founders' social contract from reconstruction to the Great Depression 4. Forging the new deal social contract from the Great Depression through World War II 5. The new deal social contract through the 1970s 6. Polarization over the new deal social contract from the 1970s to present 7. Are Americans ideologically polarized? 8. Elite polarization and democratic representation 9. Polarization as the norm of the American system.
1. Theoretical perspectives on party polarization in America 2. Establishing the founders' social contract from the constitutional convention through George Washington 3. The consequences of the founders' social contract from reconstruction to the Great Depression 4. Forging the new deal social contract from the Great Depression through World War II 5. The new deal social contract through the 1970s 6. Polarization over the new deal social contract from the 1970s to present 7. Are Americans ideologically polarized? 8. Elite polarization and democratic representation 9. Polarization as the norm of the American system.
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