scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessBook

The People's Welfare: Law and Regulation in Nineteenth-Century America

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
The People's Welfare as discussed by the authors explores the history of government regulation in America, including fire regulations, inspection and licensing rules, fair marketplace laws, the moral policing of prostitution and drunkenness, and health and sanitary codes.
Abstract
Much of today's political rhetoric decries the welfare state and our maze of government regulations. Critics hark back to a time before the state intervened so directly in citizens' lives. In The People's Welfare , William Novak refutes this vision of a stateless past by documenting America's long history of government regulation in the areas of public safety, political economy, public property, morality, and public health. Challenging the myth of American individualism, Novak recovers a distinctive nineteenth-century commitment to shared obligations and public duties in a well-regulated society. Novak explores the by-laws, ordinances, statutes, and common law restrictions that regulated almost every aspect of America's society and economy, including fire regulations, inspection and licensing rules, fair marketplace laws, the moral policing of prostitution and drunkenness, and health and sanitary codes. Based on a reading of more than one thousand court cases in addition to the leading legal and political texts of the nineteenth century, The People's Welfare demonstrates the deep roots of regulation in America and offers a startling reinterpretation of the history of American governance. |This analytical study describes the growth of a close but uneasy relationship between the United States and Taiwan during the first half of the 1950s. Accinelli focuses on the importance of the Taiwan issue in United States' relations with the People's Republic of China and Great Britain.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Jurisdiction and Scale: Legal `Technicalities' as Resources for Theory:

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explored the insight that law's mechanisms can be understood in part as mapping exercises, and proposed a mapping-based approach to the analysis of law's scales.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Model State Emergency Health Powers Act: Planning for and Response to Bioterrorism and Naturally Occurring Infectious Diseases

TL;DR: The Model Act provides state actors with the powers they need to detect and contain bioterrorism or a naturally occurring disease outbreak and contains a modernized, extensive set of principles and requirements to safeguard personal rights.
Posted Content

A World of Cities: The Causes and Consequences of Urbanization in Poorer Countries

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors model the connection between urban size and institutional failure and show that urban anonymity causes institutions to break down, suggesting a painful tradeoff between dictatorship and disorder.
Journal ArticleDOI

All Politics Is Local: The Reemergence of the Study of City Politics

TL;DR: The study of local politics has been relegated to the periphery of political science and many explanations have been offered for the marginalization of the sub-field as discussed by the authors, however, there are methodological advantages to studying local politics and analyzing politics at the substate level can generate thoroughly different kinds of questions than a purely national level focus and can offer different answers to questions that apply more generally.
Journal ArticleDOI

A World of Cities: The Causes and Consequences of Urbanization in Poorer Countries

TL;DR: In this article, the authors model the connection between urban size and institutional failure and show that urban anonymity causes institutions to break down, suggesting a painful trade-off between dictatorship and disorder.
References
More filters
Book

Splintered Sisterhood: Gender and Class in the Campaign against Woman Suffrage

TL;DR: For instance, the authors argues that many of the most vocal women of the antisuffragists were wealthy, educated women who exercised considerable political influence through their personal ties to men in politics as well as by their own positions as leaders of social service committees.
Journal ArticleDOI

Votes for women! : the woman suffrage movement in Tennessee, the South, and the nation

TL;DR: Votes for Women! as mentioned in this paper is a collection of essays and primary documents from the late nineteenth and early twenty-first century that brings into sharp focus the suffrage battles of the late 19th and early 20th centuries.