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The Corporate Rich And The Power Elite In The Twentieth Century How They Won Why Liberals And Labor Lost Ebk G William Domhoff

  • SKU: BELL-16678654
The Corporate Rich And The Power Elite In The Twentieth Century How They Won Why Liberals And Labor Lost Ebk G William Domhoff
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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The Corporate Rich And The Power Elite In The Twentieth Century How They Won Why Liberals And Labor Lost Ebk G William Domhoff instant download after payment.

Publisher: Routledge (Taylor & Francis)
File Extension: PDF
File size: 5.32 MB
Pages: 568
Author: G William Domhoff
ISBN: 9780429287527, 0429287526
Language: English
Year: 2020
Edition: ebk

Product desciption

The Corporate Rich And The Power Elite In The Twentieth Century How They Won Why Liberals And Labor Lost Ebk G William Domhoff by G William Domhoff 9780429287527, 0429287526 instant download after payment.

The Corporate Rich and the Power Elite in the Twentieth Century demonstrates exactly how the corporate rich developed and implemented the policies and created the government structures that allowed them to dominate the United States. The book is framed within three historical developments, that have made this domination possible: the rise and fall of the union movement between, the initiation and subsequent limitation of government social benefit programs, and the postwar expansion of international trade.
The book's deep exploration into the various methods the corporate rich used to centralize power corrects major empirical misunderstandings concerning all three issue-areas. Further, it explains why the three ascendant theories of power in the early twenty-first century--interest-group pluralism, organizational state theory, and historical institutionalism--cannot account for the complexity of events that established the power elite's supremacy and led to labor's fall. More generally, and convincingly, the analysis reveals how a corporate-financed policy-planning network, consisting of foundations, think tanks, and policy-discussion groups, gradually developed in the twentieth century and played a pivotal role in all three issue-areas. Filled with new archival findings and commanding detail, this book offers readers a remarkable look into the nature of power in America during the 20th century, and provides a starting point for future in-depth analyses of corporate power in the current century.

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