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Viewing 271–300 of 426 results.
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The Tyranny Of The Map: Rethinking Redlining
In trying to understand one of the key aspects of structural racism, have we constructed a new moralistic story that obscures more than it illuminates?
by
Robert Gioielli
via
The Metropole
on
November 3, 2022
May God Save Us From Economists
Over the last half-century, economics has infiltrated parts of the federal government where it has no business intruding.
by
Timothy Noah
via
The New Republic
on
October 25, 2022
Did American Business Leaders Really Try to Overthrow the President, Like in "Amsterdam"?
How David O. Russell’s movie messes around with the story of the Business Plot.
by
Jonathan M. Katz
via
Slate
on
October 8, 2022
Timothy Shenk’s ‘Realigners’
Since the 18th century, American politics has functioned via coalitions between competing factions. Can alliances survive today’s partisan climate?
by
Barton Swaim
via
The Wall Street Journal
on
October 7, 2022
Black and White Workers and Communists Built a “Civil Rights Unionism” Under Jim Crow
Today’s activists should look to North Carolina's black and white tobacco workers, who organized a union and went on strike in the teeth of the Jim Crow South.
by
Nelson Lichtenstein
via
Jacobin
on
October 3, 2022
Abortion and Partisan Entrenchment
The modern Republican Party has tied itself to Roe v. Wade. With the Supreme Court's decision in Dobbs, the party is vulnerable to new issues.
by
Jack Balkin
via
Social Science Research Network
on
September 14, 2022
The Oldest Government In History
America’s gerontocracy is disconnecting Congress from the rest of the country.
by
Annie Fu
,
Walt Hickey
,
Shayanne Gal
via
Insider
on
September 13, 2022
original
What is Political Realignment?
An annotated collection of resources from the Bunk archive that help explain the shifting sands of American politics.
by
Kathryn Ostrofsky
on
September 8, 2022
Historic Fire Lookout Towers Are Burning Down in Today’s Megafires
One of the country’s oldest fire lookouts was destroyed last year in the largest wildfire in California’s history. What else is being lost?
by
Hannah Kingsley-Ma
via
The New Republic
on
September 7, 2022
Layered Lives
Rhetoric and representation in the Southern Life History Project.
by
Lauren Tilton
,
Taylor Arnold
,
Courtney Rivard
via
Stanford University Press
on
August 30, 2022
A Big Tent
The contradictory past and uncertain future of the Democratic Party.
by
Nicholas Lemann
via
The Nation
on
July 11, 2022
Who Segregated America?
Federal housing policies contributed to the segregation of American cities in the twentieth century. But it was private interests that led the way.
by
Colin Gordon
via
Dissent
on
June 29, 2022
partner
How Conservatives Drove a Wedge Between Economic and Cultural Liberals
Elites understood that a unified left spelled doom for their economic advantages.
by
Jonathan Schlefer
via
Made By History
on
June 14, 2022
Why Did the U.S. Government Amass More Than a Billion Pounds of Cheese?
The long, strange saga of government cheese.
by
Diana Hubbell
via
Atlas Obscura
on
May 24, 2022
When Right-Wing Attacks on School Textbooks Fell Short
Some essential lessons from an earlier culture war.
by
Jonathan Zimmerman
via
The Nation
on
May 18, 2022
Hope in the Desert: Democratic Party Blues
In 'What It Took to Win,' Michael Kazin traces the history over the past two centuries of what he calls ‘the oldest mass party in the world’.
by
Eric Foner
via
London Review of Books
on
May 4, 2022
Redefining the Working Class
The diminished status of the non-white working class is not a matter of accident, but of design.
by
Shamira Ibrahim
via
The Baffler
on
May 3, 2022
Public Interests
Three books offer views of the shift from public planning to neoliberal privatization, and emphasize the need to reclaim planning in the public interest.
by
Garrett Dash Nelson
via
Places Journal
on
April 19, 2022
"A New History of an Old Idea"
On Ian Tyrrell’s "American Exceptionalism: A New History of an Old Idea."
by
Richard Cándida Smith
via
Society for U.S. Intellectual History
on
April 17, 2022
Cowboy Progressives
You likely think of the American West as deeply conservative and rural. Yet history shows this politics is very new indeed.
by
Daniel J. Herman
via
Aeon
on
April 8, 2022
When Rights Went Right
Is the American conception of constitutional rights too absolute?
by
David Cole
via
New York Review of Books
on
March 31, 2022
How Propaganda Became Entertaining
Ukraine’s wartime communications strategies have roots in World War II.
by
Kathryn Cramer Brownell
via
The Atlantic
on
March 27, 2022
Tax Regimes
On Americans’ complicated relationship to taxes, from the colonial period through the Civil War to the tax revolts of the 1980s.
by
Robin Einhorn
,
Noam Maggor
via
Phenomenal World
on
March 24, 2022
American Mandarins
David Halberstam’s title The Best and the Brightest was steeped in irony. Did these presidential advisers earn it?
by
Edward Tenner
via
The American Scholar
on
March 24, 2022
partner
The USDA Versus Black Farmers
Current attempts to correct historical discrimination by local and regional offices of the USDA have been met with charges of "reverse discrimination."
by
Matthew Wills
via
JSTOR Daily
on
March 11, 2022
When Americans Liked Taxes
The idea of liberty has often seemed to mean freedom from government and its spending. But there is an alternate history, one just as foundational and defining.
by
Gary Gerstle
via
New York Review of Books
on
February 23, 2022
No Quick Fixes: Working Class Politics From Jim Crow to the Present
Political scientist Adolph Reed Jr. discusses his new memoir.
by
Adolph Reed Jr.
,
Jon Queally
via
Common Dreams
on
February 1, 2022
The Plot Against American Democracy That Isn't Taught in Schools
How the authors of the Depression-era “Business Plot” aimed to take power away from FDR and stop his “socialist” New Deal.
by
Jonathan M. Katz
via
Rolling Stone
on
January 1, 2022
In Praise of One-Size-Fits-All
Critiques of vaccine mandates continue a neoliberal tradition of idolizing private choice at the expense of the public good.
by
Lawrence B. Glickman
via
Boston Review
on
December 2, 2021
Health Care Reform’s History of Utter Failure
Repeated failures by both political parties to get a decent policy through our 18th-century constitutional structure led to the Affordable Care Act.
by
Ryan Cooper
via
The Nation
on
November 28, 2021
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