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Reforming the City

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Ariane Liazos examines the urban reform movement that swept through the country in the early twentieth century and its unintended consequences. Reforming the City offers powerful insights into the ...
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  • 17 December 2019
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Most American cities are now administered by appointed city managers and governed by councils chosen in nonpartisan, at-large elections. In the early twentieth century, many urban reformers claimed these structures would make city government more responsive to the popular will. But on the whole, the effects of these reforms have been to make citizens less likely to vote in local elections and local governments less representative of their constituents. How and why did this happen?

Ariane Liazos examines the urban reform movement that swept through the country in the early twentieth century and its unintended consequences. Reformers hoped to make cities simultaneously more efficient and more democratic, broadening the scope of what local government should do for residents while also reconsidering how citizens should participate in their governance. However, they increasingly focused on efficiency, appealing to business groups and compromising to avoid controversial and divisive topics, including the voting rights of African Americans and women. Liazos weaves together wide-ranging nationwide analysis with in-depth case studies. She offers nuanced accounts of reform in five cities; details the activities of the National Municipal League, made up of prominent national reformers and political scientists; and analyzes quantitative data on changes in the structures of government in over three hundred cities. Reforming the City is an important study for American history and political development, with powerful insights into the relationships between scholarship and reform and between the structures of city government and urban democracy.

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Price: $160.00
Pages: 400
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Publication Date: 17 December 2019
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780231191388
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: HISTORY / United States / State & Local / General, HISTORY / United States / 20th Century, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / City Planning & Urban Development, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / Urban
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A century ago, progressive reformers often thought expertise and nonpartisanship were the solution to extreme polarization and inequality in U.S. politics, as they do now. But Ariane Liazos dramatizes the unintended consequences of changes pursued in hundreds of U.S. cities in the early 1900s. The findings in Reforming the City hold important lessons for today’s democracy reformers, along with all students of American history and politics.
Ariane Liazos is a research advisor in the social sciences and lecturer at the Harvard Extension School. With Theda Skocpol and Marshall Ganz, she is coauthor of What a Mighty Power We Can Be: African American Fraternal Groups and the Struggle for Racial Equality (2006).

Introduction: Urban Reform, Coalitions, and American Political Development
1. The Emergence of the Movement for “Good City Government”: Municipal Reform Associations, c. 1880–1900
2. “Saved by the Scholar”: Political Science, the Municipal Program, and the National Municipal League, c. 1890–1900
3. The Municipal Program and Early Campaigns for Charter Reform, c. 1895–1910
4. “The Franchise Problem”: Home Rule, Charter Reform, and the Provision of Public Services, c. 1900–1915
5. The Commission Plan, c. 1900–1915
6. “Whether Democracy and Efficiency Are Inherently Irreconcilable”: Professionalization and Expertise in Municipal Reform, c. 1905–1920
7. “The Transition to Government by Experts”: The Origins and Spread of Commission/City Manager Government, 1912–1925
8. The Legacy of the Movement for Urban Reform: State Building and Popular Control
Epilogue: The End of the Coalitions
Acknowledgments
Appendix 1
Appendix 2
Publication Abbreviations
Notes
Index