What conditions cause major policy changes under representative gov-ernment? This article addresses that question by providing a theo-retically grounded analysis of a massive policy change: the New Deal. It explains how the economic problems of the early 1930s initiated changes on several dimensions of policy: federal spending, labor mar-ket regulation, and civil rights. The article concludes by considering the broader lessons learned from the political economy of the New Deal
A growing number of economists blame the length and severity of the Great Depression on factors that...
The New Deal marked the consolidation of a novel and, in some ways, enduring set of interrelations a...
This study explores the hypothesis that voting in response to economic problems is policy-oriented: ...
Abstract The New Deal produced a fundamental change in the structure of American government. The nat...
As each presidential election passes into the history books, debate renews over the status of the Ne...
Recent research has challenged the policy bases of the New Deal realignment, arguing that it was ins...
Originally published in: Political Behavior, v. 14, no. 1 (1992), p. 45-65."As each presidential ele...
Franklin D. Roosevelt's promise of a "new deal" gave hope to millions of impoverished Americans duri...
The major turning point in the growth of the federal government was, of course, the New Deal. A host...
This study examines the relationship between Presidential leadership, the party system and the burea...
Class and Power in the New Deal provides a new perspective on the origins and implementation of the ...
A typed draft copy of a chapter for an unpublished book, America and the New Deal entitled, New Dea...
In recent years theorists such as Claus Offe, Theda Skocpol, and Fred Block have contributed to the ...
The “Great Recession,” which began at year‐end 2007, was precipitated by plunging real estate values...
A growing number of economists blame the length and severity of the Great Depression on factors that...
A growing number of economists blame the length and severity of the Great Depression on factors that...
The New Deal marked the consolidation of a novel and, in some ways, enduring set of interrelations a...
This study explores the hypothesis that voting in response to economic problems is policy-oriented: ...
Abstract The New Deal produced a fundamental change in the structure of American government. The nat...
As each presidential election passes into the history books, debate renews over the status of the Ne...
Recent research has challenged the policy bases of the New Deal realignment, arguing that it was ins...
Originally published in: Political Behavior, v. 14, no. 1 (1992), p. 45-65."As each presidential ele...
Franklin D. Roosevelt's promise of a "new deal" gave hope to millions of impoverished Americans duri...
The major turning point in the growth of the federal government was, of course, the New Deal. A host...
This study examines the relationship between Presidential leadership, the party system and the burea...
Class and Power in the New Deal provides a new perspective on the origins and implementation of the ...
A typed draft copy of a chapter for an unpublished book, America and the New Deal entitled, New Dea...
In recent years theorists such as Claus Offe, Theda Skocpol, and Fred Block have contributed to the ...
The “Great Recession,” which began at year‐end 2007, was precipitated by plunging real estate values...
A growing number of economists blame the length and severity of the Great Depression on factors that...
A growing number of economists blame the length and severity of the Great Depression on factors that...
The New Deal marked the consolidation of a novel and, in some ways, enduring set of interrelations a...
This study explores the hypothesis that voting in response to economic problems is policy-oriented: ...