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The complexity of the American economy and polity has grown at an
explosive rate in our era of globalization. Yet as the 2008
financial crisis revealed, the evolution of the American state has
not proceeded apace. The crisis exposed the system's manifold
political and economic dysfunctionalities.
Featuring a cast of leading scholars working at the intersection of
political science and American history, The Unsustainable American
State is a historically informed account of the American state's
development from the nineteenth century to the present. It focuses
in particular on the state-produced inequalities and administrative
incoherence that became so apparent in the post-1970s era.
Collectively, the book offers an unsettling account of the growth
of racial and economic inequality, the ossification of the state,
the gradual erosion of democracy, and the problems deriving from
imperial overreach. Utilizing the framework of sustainability, a
concept that is currently informing some of the best work on
governance and development, the contributors show how the USA's
current trajectory does not imply an impending collapse, but rather
a gradual erosion of capacity and legitimacy. That is a more
appropriate theoretical framework, they contend, because for all of
its manifest flaws, the American state is durable. That durability,
however, does not preclude a long relative decline.
Reconfiguring European States in Crisis offers a ground-breaking
analysis by some of Europe's leading political scientists,
examining how the European national state and the European Union
state have dealt with two sorts of changes in the last two decades.
Firstly, the volume analyses the growth of performance measurement
in government, the rise of new sorts of policy delivery agencies,
the devolution of power to regions and cities, and the spread of
neoliberal ideas in economic policy. The volume demonstrates how
the rise of non-state controlled organizations and norms combine
with Europeanization to reconfigure European states. Secondly, the
volume focuses on how the current crises in fiscal policy, Brexit,
security and terrorism, and migration through a borderless European
Union have had dramatic effects on European states and will
continue to do so.
Why have British and North American governments adopted illiberal
social policies during this century? In the Name of Liberalism
investigates examples of social policy in Britain and the United
States that conflict with liberal democratic ideals. The book
examines the use of eugenic arguments in the 1920s and 1930s, the
use of work camps in the 1930s as a response to mass unemployment
and the introduction of work-for-welfare programs since the 1980s.
The book argues that existing accounts of American and British
political development neglect how illiberal social policies are
intertwined in the creation of modern liberal democratic
institutions. Such policies are, paradoxically, justified in terms
of the liberal democratic framework itself. In the light of the
books research, the author suggests that there is a need to know
more about the internal workings of democracies to justify the
claim that liberal democracy represents the most attractive set of
political institutions.
Why have American policies failed to reduce the racial
inequalities still pervasive throughout the nation? Has President
Barack Obama defined new political approaches to race that might
spur unity and progress? "Still a House Divided" examines the
enduring divisions of American racial politics and how these
conflicts have been shaped by distinct political alliances and
their competing race policies. Combining deep historical knowledge
with a detailed exploration of such issues as housing, employment,
criminal justice, multiracial census categories, immigration,
voting in majority-minority districts, and school vouchers, Desmond
King and Rogers Smith assess the significance of President Obama's
election to the White House and the prospects for achieving
constructive racial policies for America's future.
Offering a fresh perspective on the networks of governing
institutions, political groups, and political actors that influence
the structure of American racial politics, King and Smith identify
three distinct periods of opposing racial policy coalitions in
American history. The authors investigate how today's alliances pit
color-blind and race-conscious approaches against one another,
contributing to political polarization and distorted policymaking.
Contending that President Obama has so far inadequately confronted
partisan divisions over race, the authors call for all sides to
recognize the need for a balance of policy measures if America is
to ever cease being a nation divided.
Presenting a powerful account of American political alliances
and their contending racial agendas, "Still a House Divided" sheds
light on a policy path vital to the country's future.
This book is the first comprehensive analysis of eugenics in North
America focused on the second half of the twentieth century. Based
on new research, Randall Hansen and Desmond King show why eugenic
sterilization policies persisted after the 1940s in the United
States and Canada. Through extensive archival research, King and
Hansen show how both superintendents at homes for the
'feebleminded' and pro-sterilization advocates repositioned
themselves after 1945 to avoid the taint of Nazi eugenics. Drawing
on interviews with victims of sterilization and primary documents,
this book traces the post-1940s development of eugenic policy and
shows that both eugenic arguments and committed eugenicists
informed population, welfare, and birth control policy in postwar
America. In providing revisionist histories of the choice movement,
the anti-population growth movement, and the Great Society
programs, this book contributes to public policy and political and
intellectual history.
Erasmus Darwin has often been cited as the most widely talented man
of the past 250 years. He excelled in medicine and poetry, was an
inventor and wide ranging man of science, and founded several
societies. This 2006 collection of 460 of his letters provides an
insight into the life of this amazing man. Darwin was famous
throughout Britain as a physician; his medical letters to patients
and private letters to his physician son Robert are a rich source
for historians of medicine. His lively letters to the 'Lunar Men',
Boulton, Watt, Keir and Wedgwood, provide insight into the
Industrial Revolution in England. In the 1790s Darwin propounded
the idea of biological evolution, although it was his grandson
Charles who persuaded people to take it seriously. This unique
collection reveals the variety of Erasmus Darwin's talents, and his
wide range of important friendships.
Charles Darwin's book about his grandfather, The Life of Erasmus
Darwin, is curiously fascinating. Before publication in 1879, it
was shortened by 16%, with several of the cuts directed at its most
provocative parts. The cutter, with Charles's permission, was his
daughter Henrietta - an example of the strong hidden hand of
meek-seeming Victorian women. Originally published in 2003, this
first unabridged edition, edited by Desmond King-Hele, includes all
that Charles originally intended, the cuts being restored and
printed in italics. Erasmus Darwin was one of the leading
intellectuals of the eighteenth century. He was a respected
physician, a well-known poet, a keen mechanical inventor, and a
founding member of the influential Lunar Society. He also possessed
an amazing insight into the many branches of physical and
biological science. Most notably, he adopted what we now call
biological evolution as his theory of life, 65 years prior to
Charles Darwin's Origin of Species.
The complexity of the American economy and polity has grown at an
explosive rate in our era of globalization. Yet as the 2008
financial crisis revealed, the evolution of the American state has
not proceeded apace. The crisis exposed the system's manifold
political and economic dysfunctionalities.
Featuring a cast of leading scholars working at the intersection of
political science and American history, The Unsustainable American
State is a historically informed account of the American state's
development from the nineteenth century to the present. It focuses
in particular on the state-produced inequalities and administrative
incoherence that became so apparent in the post-1970s era.
Collectively, the book offers an unsettling account of the growth
of racial and economic inequality, the ossification of the state,
the gradual erosion of democracy, and the problems deriving from
imperial overreach. Utilizing the framework of sustainability, a
concept that is currently informing some of the best work on
governance and development, the contributors show how the USA's
current trajectory does not imply an impending collapse, but rather
a gradual erosion of capacity and legitimacy. That is a more
appropriate theoretical framework, they contend, because for all of
its manifest flaws, the American state is durable. That durability,
however, does not preclude a long relative decline.
In observation of the bicentenary of Erasmus Darwin's death, Cambridge is publishing this collection of personal writings by his grandson Charles. This is the first unabridged publication of a book by Charles Darwin, and it contains a series of illuminating insights into his grandfather's life and work. With quotations from letters and candid comments by Charles Darwin about his books; and free of the conventions of scientific writing; this small volume of personal observations illuminates the life of a distinguished scientist as seen by his accomplished successor.
"In this landmark book, Desmond King reveals and corrects a glaring
gap at the epicenter of studies of racial inequality and political
development in the United States: their blindness to the pivotal
role of the state in making race. With historical precision and
analytic rigor, he demonstrates how, for seven decades following
the legal affirmation of the doctrine 'separate and equal' in 1896,
the federal government both bolstered and expanded racial
separation, in effect nationalizing the pattern of black
subordination elaborated by Southern segregationists in the
aftermath of abolition. The abiding social and symbolic marginality
of the African American community in US society thus emerges, not
as an inert legacy of slavery or a result of its alleged cultural
failings, but as a creature of state policies studiously enforced
by the federal bureaucracy until the 1960s. Enriched by a
postscript that reviews and revises its core argument, this new
edition of Separate and Unequal is one that every serious student
of racial domination and comparative politics will want to read and
engage."--Loic Wacquant, University of California, Berkeley, and
Centre de sociologie europeenne, Paris
Despite major strides in combating racial segregation and
oppression since the Civil Rights movement, racial inequality
remains a persistent and vexing problem in America today. At the
forefront of recent scholarship highlighting the central influence
of the US federal government on race relations well before the
1960s, Separate and Unequal uncovers, through archival research,
how the federal government used its power to impose a segregated
pattern of race relations among its employees and, through
itsprograms, upon the whole of American society. In a new
postscript to this revised edition, Desmond King places his
original, groundbreaking analysis in the context of recent studies
and connects the legacy of exclusionary programs and policies to
current racial disparities in welfare reform, prisons, and
education.
In the Name of Liberalism examines why the British and North American governments adopted illiberal social policies during this by this century. The book analysis examples of social policy in Britain and the United States that conflict with liberal democratic ideals. The author argues that government accommodation of illiberal policies are a paradox of a liberal democratic framework and that there is a need to question further the internal workings of entrenched democracies.
An eye-opening analysis of the Federal Reserve's massive and
unwarranted power in American life and how it favors the financial
sector over everyone else. The Federal Reserve, created more than a
century ago, is the most powerful central bank in the world. The
Fed's power, which derives from its ability to alter the money
supply and move interest rates, weighs heavily not only on the US
economy, but on the world economy as well. Lawrence R. Jacobs and
Desmond King's Fed Power is the first sustained synthesis of the
Fed's political role-especially the way in which it uses its power
to benefit some interest groups and not others-since the 2008
financial crisis. In this fully updated and revised second edition,
Fed Power addresses new developments during Trump's
presidency-particularly the Fed's massive and unprecedented
injection of liquidity into the US economy following the COVID
epidemic-and offers fresh insights on the Fed's outsized role in
picking winners and losers in the American economy. King and Jacobs
conclude with bold proposals to reform America's financial
management to prevent future crises and to restore democratic
accountability. A powerful critique of how the Federal Reserve
governs the American economy, Fed Power will be essential reading
for anyone interested in the role that the Fed's policies have
played in increasing economic and racial inequality across both the
Obama and Trump presidencies and the new directions pursued by the
Biden administration and progressive activists.
Forging a Discipline analyses the growth of the academic discipline
of politics and international relations at Oxford University over
the last hundred years. This century marked the maturation and
professionalization of social science disciplines such as political
science, economics, and sociology in the world's leading
universities. The Oxford story of teaching and research in politics
provides one case study of this transformation, and the
contributors aim to use its specifics better to understand this
general process. In their introductory and concluding chapters the
Editors argue that Oxford is a critical case to consider because
several aspects of the university and its organization seem, at
first glance, to militate against disciplinary development and
growth. Oxford's institutional structure in which colleges enjoyed
autonomy from the central university until quite recently, its
proximity to the practice of government and politics through the
supply of a steady stream of senior administrators, politicians and
prime ministers, and its emphasis on undergraduate teaching through
intensive small group tutorials all distinguish the development of
teaching and research on politics in the university from such
competitors as Manchester or the LSE as explained in one of the
contributions. These themes inform the book's chapters in which the
contributors examine the founding of the first dedicated position
in political science in the university, the study of the British
Constitution and the development of electoral studies, the
introduction and consolidation of international relations into the
Oxford social science curriculum in contrast to the way in which
war studies emerged, the commitment to research and teaching in
political theory, the careful harvesting of area studies,
particularly of Latin America and Eastern Europe including Russia,
and the distinctive role of Oxford's two social science graduate
colleges, Nuffield and St Antony's, in fostering a graduate
programme of study and research. What emerges from these
historically researched and analytical accounts is the surprising
capacity of members of the politics discipline at Oxford to forge a
leading place for their scholarly perspectives and research in such
core parts of the discipline as political theory, the study of
comparative politics as a subject rather than as an area, ideas
about order in international relations and the scientific study of
elections in Britain and comparatively. That these achievements
occurred in a university lacking the formal system of hierarchy
and, until the last decade, departmentalization makes this volume a
valuable addition to studies of the professionalization of social
science research and teaching in modern universities.
A powerful dissection of one of the fundamental problems in
American governance today: the clash between presidents determined
to redirect the nation through ever-tighter control of
administration and an executive branch still organized to promote
shared interests in steady hands, due deliberation, and expertise.
President Trump pitted himself repeatedly against the institutions
and personnel of the executive branch. In the process, two
once-obscure concepts came center stage in an eerie faceoff. On one
side was the specter of a "Deep State" conspiracy-administrators
threatening to thwart the will of the people and undercut the
constitutional authority of the president they elected to lead
them. On the other side was a raw personalization of presidential
power, one that a theory of "the unitary executive" gussied up and
allowed to run roughshod over reason and the rule of law. The Deep
State and the unitary executive framed every major contest of the
Trump presidency. Like phantom twins, they drew each other out.
These conflicts are not new. Stephen Skowronek, John A. Dearborn,
and Desmond King trace the tensions between presidential power and
the depth of the American state back through the decades and
forward through the various settlements arrived at in previous
eras. Phantoms of a Beleaguered Republic is about the breakdown of
settlements and the abiding vulnerabilities of a Constitution that
gave scant attention to administrative power. Rather than simply
dump on Trump, the authors provide a richly historical perspective
on the conflicts that rocked his presidency, and they explain why,
if left untamed, the phantom twins will continue to pull the
American government apart. Now, in this expanded paperback edition,
they address the tumultuous Trump-Biden transition and reflect more
broadly on the problems of presidential democracy in America today.
Erasmus Darwin has often been cited as the most widely talented man
of the past 250 years. He excelled in medicine and poetry; was an
inventor and wide ranging man of science, and founded several
societies. This collection of 460 of his letters, of which over
half have never been published, provides an insight into the life
of this amazing man. Darwin was famous throughout Britain as a
physician; his medical letters to patients and private letters to
his physician son Robert are a rich source for historians of
medicine. His lively letters to the 'Lunar Men', Boulton, Watt,
Keir and Wedgwood, provide insight into the Industrial Revolution
in England. In the 1790s Darwin propounded the idea of biological
evolution, although it was his grandson Charles who persuaded
people to take it seriously. This unique collection reveals the
variety of Erasmus Darwin's talents, and his wide range of
important friendships.
Spanning the entire twentieth century and encompassing immigration
policies, the nationalistic fallout from both world wars, the civil
rights movement, and nation-building efforts in the postcolonial
era, The Liberty of Strangers advances a major new interpretation
of American nationalism and the future prospects for diverse
democracies. Tracing how Americans have confronted and
relinquished, but mostly clung to group identities over the past
century, Desmond King here debunks one of the guiding assumptions
of American nationhood, namely that group distinction and
identification would gradually dissolve over time, creating a
"postethnic" nation. The divisions in American society have
consistently proven themselves too strong to dissolve and, for
better or for worse, the often-disparaged politics of
multiculturalism are here to stay, with profound implications for
America's democracy.
This book is the first comprehensive analysis of eugenics in North
America focused on the second half of the twentieth century. Based
on new research, Randall Hansen and Desmond King show why eugenic
sterilization policies persisted after the 1940s in the United
States and Canada. Through extensive archival research, King and
Hansen show how both superintendents at homes for the
'feebleminded' and pro-sterilization advocates repositioned
themselves after 1945 to avoid the taint of Nazi eugenics. Drawing
on interviews with victims of sterilization and primary documents,
this book traces the post-1940s development of eugenic policy and
shows that both eugenic arguments and committed eugenicists
informed population, welfare, and birth control policy in postwar
America. In providing revisionist histories of the choice movement,
the anti-population growth movement, and the Great Society
programs, this book contributes to public policy and political and
intellectual history.
This collection examines the foreign and domestic policies of
President George W Bush's administration. The analysis begins with
an account of how highly polarized - in terms of public opinion and
electoral patterns - this presidency has proved to be (in a chapter
by the editors). This is followed by chapters on the use of
unilateral executive powers (by Louis Fisher and William Howell)
and pre-rogative powers (by Richard Pious). Because the policy
choices of the Bush presidency have had such fundamental effects
both in domestic policy and in US foreign policy, three
contributors (Thomas Langston, John Burke, James Pfiffner) then
address the processes of decision making especially in respect to
the war against Iraq. How the administration governs by a recurring
process of campaigning is examined in chapters on public opinion
and war (by Gary Jacobson), the promotional presidency (by Larry
Jacobs), mobilizing congressional support for war (by Scott
Blinder) and the White House communications system (by Martha
Kumar). Finally the way in which the Bush White House relates to
congress and the process of building congressional coalitions to
enact laws is the subject of chapters on 'executive style' of this
administration (by Charles O Jones) and the failure to reform
social security (by Fiona Ross). It will be essential reading for
anyone wishing to understand one of the most controversial
administrations in recent years.
A powerful dissection of one of the fundamental problems in
American governance today: the clash between presidents determined
to redirect the nation through ever-tighter control of
administration and an executive branch still organized to promote
shared interests in steady hands, due deliberation, and expertise.
President Trump pitted himself repeatedly against the institutions
and personnel of the executive branch. In the process, two
once-obscure concepts came center stage in an eerie faceoff. On one
side was the specter of a "Deep State" conspiracy-administrators
threatening to thwart the will of the people and undercut the
constitutional authority of the president they elected to lead
them. On the other side was a raw personalization of presidential
power, one that a theory of "the unitary executive" gussied up and
allowed to run roughshod over reason and the rule of law. The Deep
State and the unitary executive framed every major contest of the
Trump presidency. Like phantom twins, they drew each other out.
These conflicts are not new. Stephen Skowronek, John A. Dearborn,
and Desmond King trace the tensions between presidential power and
the depth of the American state back through the decades and
forward through the various settlements arrived at in previous
eras. Phantoms of a Beleaguered Republic is about the breakdown of
settlements and the abiding vulnerabilities of a Constitution that
gave scant attention to administrative power. Rather than simply
dump on Trump, the authors provide a richly historical perspective
on the conflicts that rocked his presidency, and they explain why,
if left untamed, the phantom twins will continue to pull the
American government apart.
Rational choice theory has gained considerable influence in
politics and sociology over the past thirty years. The use of
rational choice methods has proliferated in all areas of social
inquiry. From the early days as formal proofs and unrealistic
assumptions, rational choice is increasingly being used to model
authentic situations and institutions. This collection of essays
from leading British writers in the rational choice paradigm
concentrates upon the two key aspects of rational choice: the role
of preferences and institutions. The essays encompass both
theoretical inquiries and empirical analyses. This volume is a
vital addition to growing literature on the problems and the
application of rational choice in social inquiry.
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