Argues that Americans believe that society's troubles can be solved if only their source can be identified and eliminated, and suggests that this has caused mistakes in American policy from Wilson's administration to the present
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From Publishers Weekly:
Harrington, a political scientist, erects in this volume an elaborate tripartite schema to explain 20th century American politics. She sees American policies, both domestic and foreign, as driven by the interplay of three groupslocalist (small business, agrarian); functionalist (corporate, managerial); and majoritarian (wage-earners). She argues that these three groups believe wrongly that both maximum liberty and equality can be achieved without loss to any of their individual interests. She maintains that modern industrial society undercuts that belief because the unrestrained economic power of the functionalists allows them always to gain at the expense of the others. Not surprisingly, she concludes in this turgidly written volume that political intervention is necessary to properly allocate society's economic resources.
Copyright 1986 Reed Business Information, Inc.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.
- PublisherKnopf
- Publication date1986
- ISBN 10 0394549732
- ISBN 13 9780394549736
- BindingHardcover
- Edition number1
- Number of pages308