Party Period and Public Policy: American Politics from the Age of Jackson to the Progressive Era |
Contents
3 | |
Ethnocultural Interpretations of NineteenthCentury | 29 |
The Realignment Synthesis in American History | 64 |
The Social Analysis of American Political History | 89 |
Political Parties in American History | 143 |
Antiparty Thought in the Gilded Age | 228 |
A Contemporary Reassessment | 263 |
New York State Politics 18901910 | 289 |
A Reappraisal of the Origins of Progressivism | 311 |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
American History American Party American political history antiparty beliefs Benson campaign changes cities citizens Clark Clubb coalition conflict corporations critical elections cultural Marxists Dawley Democracy Democrats and Whigs early economic policies elites Eric Foner essay ethnic ethnocultural historians Flanigan Foner Formisano Gilded Age groups Hays ideology industrial interests interpretation issues Jacksonian Jacksonian Democracy Jensen Kleppner legislative major parties mass McCormick McSeveney ment Moffett muckraking nineteenth nomic partisan partisanship party leaders party organizations party period party politics Party System party's patterns pietistic Platt policymaking political behavior political culture political parties Political Science politico-business corruption politics and government popular presidential problems programs Progressive Progressive Era progressivism Public Policy railroad realignment reform regulation religious Republican party response Roosevelt Silbey Social Analysis society Stickney studies suggest Theodore Roosevelt tion transformation twentieth century V. O. Key values voters voting behavior Walter Dean Burnham Watson Whigs Wiebe Wilentz York