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The Long Crisis New York City And The Path To Neoliberalism 1st Edition Benjamin Holtzman

  • SKU: BELL-58534710
The Long Crisis New York City And The Path To Neoliberalism 1st Edition Benjamin Holtzman
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The Long Crisis New York City And The Path To Neoliberalism 1st Edition Benjamin Holtzman instant download after payment.

Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
File Extension: PDF
File size: 26.06 MB
Pages: 353
Author: Benjamin Holtzman
ISBN: 9780197746264, 9780190843700, 9780190843717, 9780190843724, 0197746268, 0190843705, 0190843713, 0190843721
Language: English
Year: 2023
Edition: 1

Product desciption

The Long Crisis New York City And The Path To Neoliberalism 1st Edition Benjamin Holtzman by Benjamin Holtzman 9780197746264, 9780190843700, 9780190843717, 9780190843724, 0197746268, 0190843705, 0190843713, 0190843721 instant download after payment.

Across all the boroughs, The Long Crisis shows, New Yorkers helped transform their broke and troubled city in the 1970s by taking the responsibilities of city governance into the private sector and market, steering the process of neoliberalism. Newspaper headlines beginning in the mid-1960s blared that New York City, known as the greatest city in the world, was in trouble. They depicted a metropolis overcome by poverty and crime, substandard schools, unmanageable bureaucracy, ballooning budget deficits, deserting businesses, and a vanishing middle class. By the mid-1970s, New York faced a situation perhaps graver than the urban crisis: the city could no longer pay its bills and was tumbling toward bankruptcy. The Long Crisis turns to this turbulent period to explore the origins and implications of the diminished faith in government as capable of solving public problems. Conventional accounts of the shift toward market and private sector governing solutions have focused on the rising influence of conservatives, libertarians, and the business sector. Benjamin Holtzman, however, locates the origins of this transformation in the efforts of city dwellers to preserve liberal commitments of the postwar period. As New York faced an economic crisis that disrupted long-standing assumptions about the services city government could provide, its residents--organized within block associations, non-profits, and professional organizations--embraced an ethos of private volunteerism and, eventually, of partnership with private business in order to save their communities' streets, parks, and housing from neglect. Local liberal and Democratic officials came to see such alliances not as stopgap measures but as legitimate and ultimately permanent features of modern governance. The ascent of market-based policies was driven less by a political assault of pro-market ideologues than by ordinary New Yorkers experimenting with novel ways to maintain robust public services in the face of the c

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