
Contents
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Introduction Introduction
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Beyond the Weak State Beyond the Weak State
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The Age of Adjectives The Age of Adjectives
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How the American State is Distinct How the American State is Distinct
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The Independent Regulatory Agency The Independent Regulatory Agency
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Independence as Autonomy: the Federal Reserve System Independence as Autonomy: the Federal Reserve System
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Constraining the Administrative State: Courts and Congress Constraining the Administrative State: Courts and Congress
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War and State-Making: the Tax Innovation War and State-Making: the Tax Innovation
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Policy design was clever Policy design was clever
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Submerging and Delegating the American State Submerging and Delegating the American State
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The Submerged State as Policy Design The Submerged State as Policy Design
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The Submerged State as Administration The Submerged State as Administration
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Making America’s Civil Rights State Making America’s Civil Rights State
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The Segregated American State Before 1964 The Segregated American State Before 1964
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Civil rights and the administrative state Civil rights and the administrative state
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Civil rights and the standardizing state Civil rights and the standardizing state
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Civil rights and the fragmented state Civil rights and the fragmented state
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Civil rights and the associational state Civil rights and the associational state
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Multiple Dimensions, Multiple Logics Multiple Dimensions, Multiple Logics
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Conclusion: Moving American State Theory Forward Conclusion: Moving American State Theory Forward
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The Civil Rights State’s Uneven Trajectory The Civil Rights State’s Uneven Trajectory
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Enduring Racial Inequality in American State Outcomes Enduring Racial Inequality in American State Outcomes
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State-building State-building
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References References
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12 The American State
Get accessDesmond King is the Andrew W. Mellon Professor of American Government and Fellow, Nuffield College at the University of Oxford.
Krieger-Eisenhower Professor of Political Science, Johns Hopkins University
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Published:10 December 2015
Cite
Abstract
This chapter introduces the complex and extensive scholarly literature that political scientists have generated about the American federal State. It is organized into four sections and begins with the seminal work of political scientist Stephen Skowronek. After specifying the institutional structure of the American federal state, the second section identifies some of the distinctive features of this polity including the development of regulatory commissions, the way in which some agencies such as the Federal Reserve stretch the boundaries of autonomy, and the distinct congressional and judicial constraints shaping the American state. Third, the submerged state is discussed as an example of some key recent contributions about the American state. Last, we write about the challenge of transforming the set of institutions constitutive of the American State into a civil rights enforcing apparatus.
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