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  • af Roger Biles
    383,95 kr.

    How six industrial cities in the American Rust Belt reacted to deindustrialization in the years after World War II

  • af Roger Biles
    1.283,95 kr.

    How six industrial cities in the American Rust Belt reacted to deindustrialization in the years after World War II

  • af Roger Biles
    347,95 kr.

  • - Paul H. Douglas of Illinois
    af Roger Biles
    687,95 kr.

    A lifelong crusader for society's powerless, Senator Paul Douglas was one of the most influential liberals of the 20th century. This work covers his life, offering a complete portrait of the man who brought civil rights issues to the forefront of American politics.

  • - Politics, Race, and the Governing of Chicago
    af Roger Biles
    372,95 - 1.772,95 kr.

  • - Champion of Race and Reform in Chicago
    af Roger Biles
    231,95 - 322,95 kr.

  • af Roger Biles
    244,95 kr.

    The Lion and the Star not only offers an informed glimpse into the intricacies of daily German life but also confirms the continuing danger of making sweeping generalizations about German Jews and non-Jews.

  • af Roger Biles
    367,95 - 1.491,95 kr.

  • - A History of the Land and Its People
    af Roger Biles
    374,95 - 1.538,95 kr.

    An account of the state's development, from the earliest native settlements. Focusing on the state's changing population over time, this book highlights the achievements of ordinary people, including the women, the African Americans, and the other minorities. Containing illustrations, it appeals to students of history and general readers alike.

  • - Mayor Edward J. Kelly of Chicago
    af Roger Biles
    292,95 kr.

    The first full-length biography of Edward J. Kelly tells the vivid story of the rough-hewn politician who became one of Chicago's most powerful mayors. With the help of Pat Nash, Mayor Kelly built the Democratic Machine of which Richard J. Daley was to be a chief beneficiary. An enterprising political strategist, Kelly amassed a concentration of political power by drawing traditionally Republican black voters into the Democratic fold, allying the Machine with New Deal policies, and tapping the resources of organized crime.

  • - Urban America and the Federal Government, 1945-2000
    af Roger Biles
    667,95 kr.

    By the end of the twentieth century, decaying inner cities in America continued to lose ground despite the best efforts of local and federal officials. By then the investment in urban revitalization begun during the activist 1960s had become a romantic memory. Roger Biles's insightful new book shows why. The first major comprehensive treatment of the subject in thirty-five years, superseding Mark Gelfand's landmark A Nation of Cities, it examines the federal government's relationship with urban America from the Truman through the Clinton administrations. Deftly analyzing the efforts of presidents, legislators, and other policy makers to deal with a range of troubling and persistent urban issues--especially problems related to housing, transportation, and poverty--Biles chronicles the attitudes and policy proposals of each president and his chief appointees. He shows that, although various presidents announced initiatives to benefit cities, only Jimmy Carter actually made a sustained effort to do so, while the Eisenhower administration stepped back from New Deal-Fair Deal engagement in urban affairs and LBJ's Great Society programs succeeded in reviving ailing cities--until money was diverted to the Vietnam war. Biles explains how Ronald Reagan's New Federalism reduced the federal government's presence in urban America with a vengeance and how Bill Clinton's "Third Way" for America's cities signaled yet another triumph for devolution and decentralization. He also critiques the Department of Housing and Urban Development, citing its ongoing inability to serve as a strong advocate for the cities within the federal government. Well organized, clearly written, and wide-ranging, Biles's impressive treatise provides a telling critique of how in the long run the government turned a blind eye to the fate of the cities. No other work offers such a useful narrative of presidential action or inaction and Washington political maneuvering with regard to urban issues. This comprehensive history will become the standard source for understanding the development and trajectory of federal policy making affecting America's urban centers.

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