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This book examines the policies and implications of the Roosevelt New Deal, offering a detailed analysis of its legislative measures and impacts. It explores the legal and economic aspects of the New Deal, providing insights into its historical significance and influence on modern governance. The author aims to provide a comprehensive understanding of the New Deal's implementation and its effects on society, targeting scholars and students in the fields of law, political science, and history.
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The Great Depression emboldened Americans to tolerate radical experimentation in search of solutions to economic problems. Amongst the thorniest of those problems was that of Southern poverty; indeed, FDR claimed in 1933 that Southern rural poverty was the nation's 'number one economic problem'. In 'Trouble in Goshen' Fred C. Smith focuses on three communities designed and implemented to solve that problem. This book examines the economic and social theories - and their histories - that resulted in the creation and operation of the most aggressive and radical experimentation in the United States.
Rural development --- Rural poor --- New Deal, 1933-1939. --- History
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New Deal, 1933-1939 --- New Deal, 1933-1939. --- Capitalism --- Depressions --- History --- United States --- Politics and government --- Economic conditions --- 1933-1945 --- 1918-1945 --- 20th century --- 1929
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During the 1930s, Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal carried out a program of dramatic reform to counter the unprecedented failures of the market economy exposed by the Great Depression. Contrary to the views of today's conservative critics, this book argues that New Dealers were not 'anticapitalist' in the ways in which they approached the problems confronting society. Rather, they were reformers who were deeply interested in fixing the problems of capitalism, if at times unsure of the best tools to use for the job. In undertaking their reforms, the New Dealers profoundly changed the United States in ways that still resonate today. Lively and engaging, this narrative history focuses on the impact of political and economic change on social and cultural relations.
New Deal, 1933-1939. --- Capitalism --- Depressions --- Market economy --- Economics --- Profit --- Capital --- New Deal, 1933-1939 --- History --- United States --- Politics and government --- Economic conditions
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In 1936, director John Ford claimed to be making movies for “a new kind of public” that wanted more honest pictures. Graham Cassano’s A New Kind of Public: Community, solidarity, and political economy in New Deal cinema, 1935-1948 argues that this new kind of public was forged in the fires of class struggle and economic calamity. Those struggles appeared in Hollywood productions, as the movies themselves tried to explain the causes and consequence of the Great Depression. Using the tools of critical Marxism and cultural theory, Cassano surveys Hollywood’s political economic explanations and finds a field of symbolic struggle in which radical visions of solidarity and conflict competed with the dominant class ideology for the loyalty of this new audience.
New Deal, 1933-1939, in motion pictures. --- Motion pictures --- Political aspects --- Social aspects
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The global financial crisis of 2007-2008 was the most severe since the Great Depression. This book is a systematic evaluation of the parallels between the Great Depression and the 2007-2008 global economic meltdown. Although many books have been written on this topic, the unique aspect of this book is the analysis of the positive and negative lessons for contemporary policy-making of the New Deal response to the crisis, through viewing both the New Deal and the recent economic crisis in combination with the environmental crises of both eras. Integrating a unique blend of disciplines, this volu
New Deal, 1933-1939. --- Depressions --- Recessions --- United States --- Economic policy --- Economic conditions
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New Deal --- Architecture du paysage --- Olmsted, Frederick Law --- Roosevelt, Franklin Delano
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During the Great Depression, with thousands on bread lines, farmers were instructed by the New Deal Agricultural Adjustment Act to produce less food in order to stabilize food prices and restore the market economy. Fruit was left to rot on trees, crops were plowed under, and millions of piglets and sows were slaughtered and discarded. Many Americans saw the government action as a senseless waste of food that left the hungry to starve, initiating public protests against food and farm policy. White approaches these events as performances where competing notions of morality and citizenship were a
Agriculture and state --- Protest movements --- New Deal, 1933-1939. --- History --- New Deal, 1933-1939 --- Agrarian question --- Agricultural policy --- Agriculture --- State and agriculture --- Government policy --- Social movements --- Economic policy --- Land reform --- E-books
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At no time during the Great Depression was the contradiction between agriculture surplus and widespread hunger more wrenchingly graphic than in the government's attempt to raise pork prices through the mass slaughter of miliions of "unripe" little pigs. This contradiction was widely perceived as a "paradox." In fact, as Janet Poppendieck makes clear in this newly expanded and updated volume, it was a normal, predictable working of an economic system rendered extreme by the Depression. The notion of paradox, however, captured the imagination of the public and policy makers, and it was to this definition of the problem that surplus commodities distribution programs in the Hoover and Roosevelt administrations were addressed. This book explains in readable narrative how the New Deal food assistance effort, originally conceived as a relief measure for poor people, became a program designed to raise the incomes of commercial farmers. In a broader sense, the book explains how the New Deal years were formative for food assistance in subsequent administrations; it also examines the performance--or lack of performance--of subsequent in-kind relief programs. Beginning with a brief survey of the history of the American farmer before the depression and the impact of the Depression on farmers, the author describes the development of Hoover assistance programs and the events at the end of that administration that shaped the "historical moment" seized by the early New Deal. Poppendieck goes on to analyze the food assistance policies and programs of the Roosevelt years, the particular series of events that culminated in the decision to purchase surplus agriculture products and distribute them to the poor, the institutionalization of this approach, the resutls achieved, and the interest groups formed. The book also looks at the takeover of food assistance by the U.S. Department of Agriculture and its gradual adaptation for use as a tool in the maintenance of farm income. Utliizing a wide variety of official and unofficial sources, the author reveals with unusual clarity the evolution from a policy directly responsive to the poor to a policy serving mainly democratic needs.
Agriculture and state --- Depressions --- Food relief --- Agrarian question --- Agricultural policy --- Agriculture --- State and agriculture --- Economic policy --- Land reform --- Famine relief --- Food aid programs --- Food assistance programs --- Disaster relief --- Humanitarian assistance --- Public welfare --- Emergency food supply --- History. --- Government policy --- Food relief - United States - History. --- Food distribution programs --- 20th century american history. --- agricultural surplus. --- american government. --- american history. --- breadlines. --- california studies in food and culture series. --- commercial farmers. --- cultural studies. --- economic system. --- fdr. --- food assistance. --- government. --- great depression. --- history. --- hoover administration. --- hunger. --- new deal food assistance effort. --- new deal programs. --- policy makers. --- president franklin d roosevelt. --- president herbert hoover. --- roosevelt administration. --- surplus commodities. --- us department of agriculture. --- widespread hunger.
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