This interesting collection of studies considers as Midwestern the states of Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota, and Wisconsin. Its nineteen contributors, authorities in state politics and government, achieve an overall consistency among their chapters by adhering to the editors\u27 outline of the volume\u27s subject matter. Although published in 1994, much of the book\u27s research was done in the 1980s
While the South, West, and New England have always possessed distinctive regional identities, the Mi...
Review of: The State of Disunion: Regional Sources of Modern American Partisanship, by Nicole Mell...
Review of: Ethnic Leadership and Midwestern Politics: Scandinavian Americans and the Progressive Mov...
This interesting collection of studies considers as Midwestern the states of Illinois, Indiana, Io...
Ostler\u27s review and interpretation of political events in Iowa is convincing, and the tables he p...
Review of: The Midwest and the Nation: Rethinking the History of an American Region. Cayton, Andrew ...
Review of: Diversity, Conflict and State Politics: Regionalism in Illinois. Nardulli, Peter F., ed
This multidisciplinary bibliography with annotations offers a judicious sampling of the best publish...
Review of: Finding a New Midwestern History, edited by Jon K. Lauck, Gleaves Whitney, and Joseph Hog...
Why was there no populism in Iowa? That is the question posed by Jeffrey Ostler, assistant professor...
This volume is a welcome addition to the sparse literature on western politics. Its approach is thre...
Review of: "Cultivating Regionalism: Higher Education and the Making of the American Midwest," a par...
The Dakotas are often an overlooked and underexamined part of the United States. No one seems to kno...
The Political Economy of Manitoba analyses the evolution of social, economic, and political marginal...
Review of: "Wisconsin Politics and Government: America\u27s Laboratory of Democracy," James K. Conan...
While the South, West, and New England have always possessed distinctive regional identities, the Mi...
Review of: The State of Disunion: Regional Sources of Modern American Partisanship, by Nicole Mell...
Review of: Ethnic Leadership and Midwestern Politics: Scandinavian Americans and the Progressive Mov...
This interesting collection of studies considers as Midwestern the states of Illinois, Indiana, Io...
Ostler\u27s review and interpretation of political events in Iowa is convincing, and the tables he p...
Review of: The Midwest and the Nation: Rethinking the History of an American Region. Cayton, Andrew ...
Review of: Diversity, Conflict and State Politics: Regionalism in Illinois. Nardulli, Peter F., ed
This multidisciplinary bibliography with annotations offers a judicious sampling of the best publish...
Review of: Finding a New Midwestern History, edited by Jon K. Lauck, Gleaves Whitney, and Joseph Hog...
Why was there no populism in Iowa? That is the question posed by Jeffrey Ostler, assistant professor...
This volume is a welcome addition to the sparse literature on western politics. Its approach is thre...
Review of: "Cultivating Regionalism: Higher Education and the Making of the American Midwest," a par...
The Dakotas are often an overlooked and underexamined part of the United States. No one seems to kno...
The Political Economy of Manitoba analyses the evolution of social, economic, and political marginal...
Review of: "Wisconsin Politics and Government: America\u27s Laboratory of Democracy," James K. Conan...
While the South, West, and New England have always possessed distinctive regional identities, the Mi...
Review of: The State of Disunion: Regional Sources of Modern American Partisanship, by Nicole Mell...
Review of: Ethnic Leadership and Midwestern Politics: Scandinavian Americans and the Progressive Mov...