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A government out of sight
Author:
ISBN: 9780521820974 0521820979 9780521527866 0521527864 9780511576324 9780511534324 0511534329 0511576323 1107195101 1107385784 128333108X 0511534019 9786613331083 0511532601 0511531699 0511533519 Year: 2009 Publisher: Cambridge New York Cambridge University Press

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Abstract

While it is obvious that America's state and local governments were consistently active during the nineteenth century, a period dominated by laissez-faire, political historians of twentieth-century America have assumed that the national government did very little during this period. A Government Out of Sight challenges this premise, chronicling the ways in which the national government intervened powerfully in the lives of nineteenth-century Americans through the law, subsidies, and the use of third parties (including state and local governments), while avoiding bureaucracy. Americans have always turned to the national government - especially for economic development and expansion - and in the nineteenth century even those who argued for a small, nonintrusive central government demanded that the national government expand its authority to meet the nation's challenges. In revising our understanding of the ways in which Americans turned to the national government throughout this period, this study fundamentally alters our perspective on American political development in the twentieth century, shedding light on contemporary debates between progressives and conservatives about the proper size of government and government programs and subsidies that even today remain 'out of sight'.

Chain reaction : expert debate and public participation in American commercial nuclear power, 1945-1975
Author:
ISBN: 0511600984 0521372968 052145736X Year: 1991 Publisher: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press,

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Abstract

Path-breaking research into the Atomic Energy Commission's internal memorandum files supports this text's explanation of how and why America came to depend so heavily on its experts after World War II and why their authority and political clout declined in the 1970s.

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