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Paving the Way: New York Road Building and the American State, 1880-1956 [Hardback]

  • Format: Hardback, 320 pages, height x width x depth: 244x158x29 mm, weight: 665 g, 3 maps
  • Pub. Date: 04-Mar-2008
  • Publisher: University Press of Kansas
  • ISBN-10: 0700615628
  • ISBN-13: 9780700615629
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  • Price: 67,60 €
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  • Format: Hardback, 320 pages, height x width x depth: 244x158x29 mm, weight: 665 g, 3 maps
  • Pub. Date: 04-Mar-2008
  • Publisher: University Press of Kansas
  • ISBN-10: 0700615628
  • ISBN-13: 9780700615629
Other books in subject:
Most historians have credited New Deal initiatives in economic regulation and social welfare policy with bringing about the modern American state. Michael Fein now reveals the surprising story of how road building paved the way to the modern state during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries and how public works policy emerged as a third critical pillar in support of state building.""Paving the Way"" shows that the growing transportation needs of a steadily industrializing nation reconfigured state politics, bringing about a revolution in governance as it reshaped the landscape. Examining state and local policy developments from half a century before the New Deal, Fein describes how the transition from rutted wagon trails to smooth highways shifted road-maintenance responsibility from local residents to state engineers. Focusing on New York State, a national leader in infrastructure development, Fein demonstrates that its citizens gradually became more comfortable with state bureaucracy because it resulted in better roads.This conferral of political legitimacy on state engineers by the general populace proved instrumental in the consolidation of engineers' power, translating their professional expertise into a new kind of politics. Fein charts five distinct road-building policy regimes to explain how a basic function of governance - providing public ways - evolved from 1880 to 1956. He also explores the contested nature of these regime changes, as cycling and automobile clubs, construction and real estate interests, hard-nosed agrarians, urban bosses, and professional engineers sought to shape highway policy to their advantage.Fein argues that these state-local power negotiations were important rehearsals for the overall centralization of bureaucratic authority in the mid-twentieth century. Although other traditionally local policy concerns such as education and social welfare would undergo similar transformations, road building was the first major policy area in which older relations between citizens and governing institutions were replaced by modern intergovernmental arrangements.""Paving the Way"" reminds us that what we take for granted today as a basic function of government bureaucracy was once an open and even controversial question. It offers a new perspective on federal power, arguing that the modern American state rested on the rise of a more complex federalism than has been supposed.

Reviews

Fein offers keen interpretive insights about the contested policies and politics that shaped a complex American federalism in the twentieth century. His book makes a compelling argument for the importance of public works policy in the evolution of American political development and makes a significant contribution to U.S. transportation and mobility history. Raymond A. Mohl, author of The Making of Urban America ""A path-breaking and indispensable book for understanding the evolution of the American highway network."" Clay McShane, author of Down the Asphalt Path: American Cities and the Automobile ""A conceptually very important book."" Mark H. Rose, author of Interstate: Express Highway Politics

Aknowledgments vii
Introduction 1(17)
Old Ways: The Local Road-Building Regime in Late-Nineteenth-Century New York
18(32)
New Ways: The Emergence of a Subfederal Road-Building Regime, 1898-1919
50(27)
Highways: State-Centered Bureaucracy and the Elevation of Engineer-Administrators, 1919-1931
77(53)
Clearing the Way: Depression, War, and the Nationalization of the Bureaucratic Regime, 1931-1945
130(50)
Authority: The Thruway and the Consolidation of the Bureaucratic Regime, 1945-1956
180(53)
Conclusion: Warning Signs: Weak Points in the Bureaucratic Regime 233(10)
Notes 243(42)
Bibliography 285(20)
Index 305


Michael R. Fein is assistant professor of history at Johnson & Wales University in Providence, Rhode Island.