The Growth of American Government: Governance from the Cleveland Era to the Present

Front Cover
Indiana University Press, 1995 - History - 289 pages

"This ambitious, well-written book will be a useful resource for scholars... an excellent overview... a fine, readable introduction that presents its analysis in a straightforward manner free from ideological baggage." --Congress & The Presidency

"A refreshingly unorthodox narrative. Campbell [explains] in plain language how government grew. His stance is neither liberal nor conservative, but simply well-informed and reasonable." --Walter Nugent, University of Notre Dame

"The canvas is large, but one comes away from the book with an understanding of what has happened, the factors contributing to these developments, and their consequences. Strongly recommended." --Samuel McSeveney, Vanderbilt University

"Ballard Campbell has synthesized an amazing range of material: federal, state and even local studies, from history, political science, economics, and assorted other specialized studies. The product is a strikingly comprehensive and readable history of the rise of government in the USA. Even better, it provides a coherent explanation of why the state grew so large." --Richard Jensen, University of Illinois-Chicago

"His overview (chapter 2) should be a compulsory assignment for any seminar on modern political culture... " --The Journal of American History

"Campbell's book is a marvelous multidisciplinary synthesis that builds on the findings of historians of national, state, and local government, along with those of economists and political scientists, to provide a coherent account of the rise of modern American governing structures." --Journal of Interdisciplinary History

"The book should be useful in the classroom, even for freshmen classes in U.S. history and government." --American Historical Review

"Readable, and refreshingly unorthodox, Campbell provides a coherent explanation of how and why government has become so large. His book deserves inclusion in any undergraduate bibliography covering the development of American government." --Political Studies Association

This engaging survey of the growth of government in America in the last century focuses on the evolution of public policy and its relationship to the constitutional and political structure of government at the federal, state, and local levels.

 

Contents

Introduction
1
Stages of American Civic Expansion
3
Governing the Cleveland Era
8
Government Expenditures 1902
18
The Course and Causes of Growth
28
Evolution of Federal Functions since 1887
32
Public Spending 18901990
34
Socioeconomic Changes 18701990
40
U S Government Expenditures 19291990
113
The New Federal Regulations
129
The New Income Security
135
Social Security 19501990
140
Welfare 19501990
148
Paying for Modern Government
175
Revenue Amount Governmental Source and Federal Grants 19021990
182
Revenue Types 19021990
183

The Transition Era
55
The Great Depression and Economic Policy
83
New Deal Economic Policy
90
The Managed Economy since
106
The Reagan Era and the Restrained Polity
224
Notes
242
Bibliography
265
Copyright

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Common terms and phrases

Popular passages

Page 272 - Robert H. Wiebe, The Search for Order, 1877-1920 (New York: Hill and Wang, 1967), and Businessmen and Reform: A Study of the Progressive Movement (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1962).

About the author (1995)

BALLARD C. CAMPBELL is Professor of History at Northeastern University, author of Representative Democracy: Public Policy and Midwestern Legislatures in the Late Nineteenth Century, and Associate Editor of the American National Biography.