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This book focuses on transformations of political culture from times past to future-present. It defines the meaning of political culture and explores the cultural values and institutions of kinship communities and dynastic intermediaries, including chiefdoms and early states. It systematically examines the rise and gradual universalization of modern sovereign nation-states. Contemporary debates concerning nationality, nationalism, citizenship, and hyphenated identities are engaged. The authors recount the making of political culture in the American nation-state and look at the processes of internal colonialism in the American experience, examining how major ethnic, sectarian, racial, and other distinctions arose and congealed into social and cultural categories. The book concludes with a study of the Holocaust, genocide, crimes against humanity, and the political cultures of violation in post-colonial Rwanda and in racialized ethno-political conflicts in various parts of the world. Struggles over legitimacy in nation-building and state-building are at the heart of this new take on the important role of political culture.
This book focuses on transformations of political culture from times past to future-present. It defines the meaning of political culture and explores the cultural values and institutions of kinship communities and dynastic intermediaries, including chiefdoms and early states. It systematically examines the rise and gradual universalization of modern sovereign nation-states. Contemporary debates concerning nationality, nationalism, citizenship, and hyphenated identities are engaged. The authors recount the making of political culture in the American nation-state and look at the processes of internal colonialism in the American experience, examining how major ethnic, sectarian, racial, and other distinctions arose and congealed into social and cultural categories. The book concludes with a study of the Holocaust, genocide, crimes against humanity, and the political cultures of violation in post-colonial Rwanda and in racialized ethno-political conflicts in various parts of the world. Struggles over legitimacy in nation-building and state-building are at the heart of this new take on the important role of political culture.
One of the great myths of contemporary American culture is that
the United States' food supply is the safest in the world because
the government works to guarantee food safety and enforce certain
standards on food producers, processors, and distributors. In
reality U.S. food safety administration and oversight have remained
essentially the same for more than a century, with the Pure Food
and Drug Act and the Federal Meat Inspection Act of 1906 continuing
to frame national policy despite dramatic changes in production,
processing, and distribution throughout the twentieth
century. "In Food We Trust" is the first comprehensive examination of the
history of food safety policy in the United States, analyzing
critical moments in food safety history from Upton Sinclair's
publication of "The Jungle "to Congress's passage of the 2010 Food
Safety Modernization Act. With five case studies of significant
food safety crises ranging from the 1959 chemical contamination of
cranberries to the 2009 outbreak of salmonella in peanut butter,
"In Food We Trust" contextualizes a changing food regulatory regime
and explains how federal agencies are fundamentally limited in
their power to safeguard the food supply.
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