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Forged Consensus Science, Technology, and Economic Policy in the United States, 1921-1953 / David M. Hart.

De Gruyter Princeton University Press eBook Package Archive 1927-1999 Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Hart, David M., 1961-
Series:
Princeton studies in American politics.
Princeton studies in American politics
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Technology and state--United States.
Science and state--United States.
Technology and state.
Science and state.
Economic policy.
Technology and state--United States--History.
Science and state--United States--History.
United States--Economic policy--20th century.
United States.
United States--Economic policy.
Genre:
History.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (272 p.) : 1 line drawing
Place of Publication:
Princeton, N.J. : Princeton University Press, 1998.
Language Note:
In English.
Summary:
In this thought-provoking book, David Hart challenges the creation myth of post--World War II federal science and technology policy. According to this myth, the postwar policy sprang full-blown from the mind of Vannevar Bush in the form of Science, the Endless Frontier (1945). Hart puts Bush's efforts in a larger historical and political context, demonstrating in the process that Bush was but one of many contributors to this complex policy and not necessarily the most successful one. Herbert Hoover, Karl Compton, Thurman Arnold, Henry Wallace, Robert Taft, and Curtis LeMay--along with more familiar figures like Bush--are among those whose endeavors he traces.Hart places these policy entrepreneurs in the broad scheme of American political development, connecting each one's vision of the state in this apparently esoteric policy area to the central issues, events, and figures of mid-century America and to key theoretical debates. Hart's work reveals the wide range of ideas, often in conflict with one another, that underlay what later observers interpreted as a "postwar consensus." In Hart's view, these visions--and the interests and institutions that shape their translation into public policy--form the enduring basis of American politics in this important area. Policymakers today are still grappling with the legacies of the forged consensus.
Contents:
The malleability of American liberalism and the making of public policy
The Republican ascendancy and the crash: associative undercurrents in a Conservative Era, 1921-1936
Trial and error: science, technology, and economic policy in the first Roosevelt administration, 1933-1936
Breaking bottlenecks and blockades: the heyday of reform liberalism, 1937-1940, and its postwar consequences
Old fights, new accommodations: wartime experiments and the demise of reform liberalism, 1940-1945
Groping toward management: science, technology, and macro- and microeconomic policy, 1945-1950
"The crescendo of hideous invention": the national security state comes of age, 1945-1953
The past in the present: the "hybrid" in the Cold War and beyond.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Description based on print version record.
ISBN:
9780691146546
0691146543
9781400832422
140083242X
OCLC:
1250073541

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