Book Description
This book contains essays on the historical development of the knowledge base upon which public policies depend.
Author : Michael J. Lacey
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 460 pages
File Size : 34,79 MB
Release : 1993-06-25
Category : History
ISBN : 9780521416382
This book contains essays on the historical development of the knowledge base upon which public policies depend.
Author : Benno Engels
Publisher : Rowman & Littlefield
Page : 477 pages
File Size : 15,18 MB
Release : 2021-01-15
Category : History
ISBN : 1498585450
Using a neo-Marxian perspective, Benno Engels examines the absence of urban planning in nineteenth-century England. In his analysis of urbanization in England, Engels considers the influences of property owners, inheritance laws, local government structures, fiscal crises of the local and central state, shifts in voter sentiments, fluctuating economic conditions, and class-based pressure group activity.
Author : Mark Hendrickson
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 337 pages
File Size : 33,67 MB
Release : 2013-05-27
Category : Business & Economics
ISBN : 1107028604
This book argues that the period from World War I to the Great Depression was an incubating era when innovative and lasting policy paradigms emerged.
Author : Jordanna Bailkin
Publisher : Univ of California Press
Page : 381 pages
File Size : 50,10 MB
Release : 2012-11-15
Category : History
ISBN : 0520289471
This book investigates how decolonization transformed British society in the 1950s and 1960s, and examines the relationship between the postwar and the postimperial.
Author : Oz Frankel
Publisher : JHU Press
Page : 396 pages
File Size : 15,76 MB
Release : 2006-07-21
Category : History
ISBN : 9780801883408
"Performing, printing, and then circulating these studies, government established an economy of exchange with its diverse constituencies. In this medium, which Frankel terms "print statism," not only tangible objects such as reports and books but knowledge itself changed hands. As participants, citizens assumed the standing of informants and readers."
Author : Margot Canaday
Publisher : Princeton University Press
Page : 297 pages
File Size : 18,94 MB
Release : 2009-07-06
Category : Political Science
ISBN : 1400830427
How the government enforced sex and gender conformity and relegated gays to second-class citizenship The Straight State is the most expansive study of the federal regulation of homosexuality yet written. Unearthing startling new evidence from the National Archives, Margot Canaday shows how the state systematically came to penalize homosexuality, giving rise to a regime of second-class citizenship that sexual minorities still live under today. Canaday looks at three key arenas of government control—immigration, the military, and welfare—and demonstrates how federal enforcement of sexual norms emerged with the rise of the modern bureaucratic state. She begins at the turn of the twentieth century when the state first stumbled upon evidence of sex and gender nonconformity, revealing how homosexuality was policed indirectly through the exclusion of sexually "degenerate" immigrants and other regulatory measures aimed at combating poverty, violence, and vice. Canaday argues that the state's gradual awareness of homosexuality intensified during the later New Deal and through the postwar period as policies were enacted that explicitly used homosexuality to define who could enter the country, serve in the military, and collect state benefits. Midcentury repression was not a sudden response to newly visible gay subcultures, Canaday demonstrates, but the culmination of a much longer and slower process of state-building during which the state came to know and to care about homosexuality across many decades. Social, political, and legal history at their most compelling, The Straight State explores how regulation transformed the regulated: in drawing boundaries around national citizenship, the state helped to define the very meaning of homosexuality in America.
Author : Nancy Christie
Publisher : University of Toronto Press
Page : 486 pages
File Size : 43,2 MB
Release : 2000-01-01
Category : History
ISBN : 9780802083210
The development of the modern social security state in Canada saw an ideological shift away from the mother and welfare entitlements based on family reproduction, and toward state policies that promoted men's paid labour in the workplace.
Author : Michael Nelson
Publisher : CQ Press
Page : 609 pages
File Size : 35,92 MB
Release : 2018-03-08
Category : Political Science
ISBN : 1544317328
Written by top-notch presidency scholars and carefully edited into a text-reader format, The Presidency and the Political System, Eleventh Edition showcases a collection of original essays focused on a range of topics, institutions, and issues relevant to understanding the American presidency.
Author : Stephanie Ward
Publisher : Manchester University Press
Page : 372 pages
File Size : 23,50 MB
Release : 2016-05-16
Category : History
ISBN : 1526112329
Unemployment and the state in Britain offers an important and original contribution to understandings of the 1930s. Through a comparative case study of south Wales and the north-east of England, the book explores the impact of the highly controversial means test, the relationship between the unemployed and the government and the nature of some of the largest protests of the interwar period. This study will appeal to students and scholars of the depression, social movements, studies of the unemployed, social policy and interwar British society.
Author : Helene Silverberg
Publisher : Princeton University Press
Page : 345 pages
File Size : 13,83 MB
Release : 2021-03-09
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 0691227683
This collection of essays provides the first systematic and multidisciplinary analysis of the role of gender in the formation and dissemination of the American social sciences in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Other books have traced the history of academic social science without paying attention to gender, or have described women's social activism while ignoring its relation to the production of new social knowledge. In contrast, this volume draws long overdue attention to the ways in which changing gender relations shaped the development and organization of the new social knowledge. And it challenges the privileged position that academic--and mostly male--social science has been granted in traditional histories by showing how women produced and popularized new forms of social knowledge in such places as settlement houses and the Russell Sage Foundation. The book's varied perspectives, building on recent work in history and feminist theory, break from the traditional view of the social sciences as objective bodies of expert knowledge. Contributors examine new forms of social knowledge, rather, as discourses about gender relations and as methods of cultural critique. The book will create a new framework for understanding the development of both social science and the history of gender relations in the United States. The contributors are: Guy Alchon, Nancy Berlage, Desley Deacon, Mary Dietz, James Farr, Nancy Folbre, Kathryn Kish Sklar, Dorothy Ross, Helene Silverberg, and Kamala Visweswaran.