Unequal democracy : the political economy of the new gilded age / Larry M. Bartels.
Material type:
- 9781400828357 (electronic bk.)
- 140082835X (electronic bk.)
- Political economy of the new gilded age
- United States -- Economic conditions -- 1945-
- Equality -- Economic aspects -- United States
- Political culture -- United States -- History
- Social classes -- Political aspects -- United States
- Power (Social sciences) -- Economic aspects -- United States
- Democracy -- Economic aspects -- United States
- Democracy
- Equality
- Political culture
- Power (Social sciences)
- Social classes
- POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Economic Conditions
- BUSINESS & ECONOMICS -- Economics -- Comparative
- BUSINESS & ECONOMICS -- Economic Conditions
- BUSINESS & ECONOMICS -- Economic History
- 330.973
- HC106.5 B283u 2008
Item type | Current library | Home library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Vol info | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Biblioteca Juan Bosch | Biblioteca Juan Bosch | Ciencias Sociales | Ciencias Sociales (3er. Piso) | HC106.5 B283u 2008 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 3 | 1 | Available | 00000096901 |
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Includes bibliographical references (p. [305]-316) and index.
The new gilded age -- Escalating economic inequality -- Interpreting inequality -- Economic inequality as a political issue -- Inequality and American democracy -- The partisan political economy -- Partisan patterns of income growth -- A partisan coincidence? -- Partisan differences in macroeconomic policy -- Macroeconomic performance and income growth -- Partisan policies and post-tax income growth -- Democrats, Republicans, and the rise of inequality -- Class politics and partisan change -- In search of the working class -- Has the white working class abandoned the Democratic party? -- Have working-class whites become more conservative? -- Do "moral values" trump economics? -- Are religious voters distracted from economic issues? -- Class politics, alive and well -- Partisan biases in economic accountability -- Myopic voters -- The political timing of income growth -- Class biases in economic voting -- The wealthy give something back: partisan biases in campaign spending -- Political consequences of biased accountability -- Do Americans care about inequality? -- Egalitarian values -- Rich and poor -- Perceptions of inequality -- Facts and values in the realm of inequality -- Homer gets a tax cut -- The Bush tax cuts -- Public support for the tax cuts -- Unenlightened self-interest -- The impact of political information -- Chump change -- Into the sunset -- The strange appeal of estate tax repeal -- Public support for estate tax repeal -- Is public support for repeal a product of misinformation? -- Did interest groups manufacture public antipathy to the estate tax? -- Elite ideology and the politics of estate tax repeal -- The eroding minimum wage -- The economic effects of the minimum wage -- Public support for the minimum wage -- The politics of inaction -- Democrats, unions, and the eroding minimum wage -- The earned income tax credit -- Reversing the tide -- Economic inequality and political representation -- Ideological representation -- Unequal responsiveness -- Unequal responsiveness on social issues: the case of abortion -- Partisan differences in representation -- Why are the poor unrepresented? -- Unequal democracy -- Who governs? -- Partisan politics and "the have-nots" -- Political obstacles to economic equality -- The city of utmost necessity.
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