
Contents
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Hidden in Plain Sight: The Morphology of the “First New Federalism” Hidden in Plain Sight: The Morphology of the “First New Federalism”
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Prelude to the First New Federalism Prelude to the First New Federalism
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Toward Depoliticization Toward Depoliticization
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Not Going Gently into That Good Night Not Going Gently into That Good Night
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Bringing the National State Back In? Bringing the National State Back In?
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The Political and Institutional Roots of State Building through Intergovernmental Bureaucracy The Political and Institutional Roots of State Building through Intergovernmental Bureaucracy
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The Realpolitik of the “Uneasy State” The Realpolitik of the “Uneasy State”
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Traversing “No Man's Land”: The Tools of the First New Federalism Traversing “No Man's Land”: The Tools of the First New Federalism
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The Dog that Didn't Bark: Administrative Reform, Academic Research, and the First New Federalism The Dog that Didn't Bark: Administrative Reform, Academic Research, and the First New Federalism
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Bringing the Study of the First New Federalism into Broader Research Focus Bringing the Study of the First New Federalism into Broader Research Focus
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References References
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3 The “First New Federalism” and the Development of the Administrative State, 1883–1929
Get accessKimberley Johnson is Associate Professor of Political Science and Urban Studies in Barnard College at Columbia University.
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Published:02 January 2011
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Abstract
This article provides several lines of interrelated arguments related to scholarly oversight. These oversights occurred as national state-building reformers were stymied by political and judicial realpolitik and instead tapped into and appropriated the existing capacity of the states. It outlines the nature of the American federal system. The development of bureaucratic capacity at the national and state levels in the last third of the nineteenth century is also described. Demonstrated next is how partisan and institutional incentives in Congress, the presidency, and the judiciary fostered the emergence of qualitatively different intergovernmental policy tools. It then summarizes the reasons for the oversight by researchers of this critical era of national American state building and concludes by offering suggestions for future research. The American state that emerged, especially after the New Deal, was far stronger and more centralized in administrative capacity than what had previously existed.
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