ABSTRACT

Volume 3 "POLITICS and GOVERNMENT’ of the American Cities; series. This collection brings together more than 200 scholarly articles pertaining to the history and development of urban life in the United States during the past two centuries. The articles about municipal government contained in the third volume include discussions of how rapid urbanization in the early nineteenth century produced a chain reaction, creating first the need for new political institutions, then the rise of machine politics, and, finally, reform movements that designed, advocated, and implemented new institutional structures such as the commission and city manager forms of government. Volume 3 also includes articles that consider the nature of intergovernmental relations at the end of the twentieth century and the connections between the governments of cities and the governments of the regions surrounding them—localities, states, and the nation.

part |82 pages

Bosses and Machines

chapter |20 pages

Rising Democratic Spirits

Immigrants, Temperance, and Tammany Hall, 1854–1860

part |63 pages

Reform and Reformers

chapter |10 pages

On Bosses, Reformers, and Urban Growth

Some Suggestions for a Political Typology of American Cities

chapter |21 pages

The Reform of Municipal Government in New York City

From Seth Low to John Purroy Mitchel

part |51 pages

The City, Its Region, and the State

part |104 pages

The City and the Federal Government

chapter |33 pages

Changing Patterns of Policy

The Decision Making Environment of Urban Transportation*

chapter |23 pages

Financing Home Ownership

The Federal Role In Neighborhood Decline