ABSTRACT

There are nearly 20,000 general-purpose municipal governments—cities—in the United States, employing more people than the federal government. About twenty of those cities received charters of incorporation well before ratification of the U.S. Constitution, and several others were established urban centers more than a century before the American Revolution. Yet despite their estimable size and prevalence in the United States, city government and politics has been a woefully neglected topic within the recent study of American political development.

The volume brings together some of the best of both the most established and the newest urban scholars in political science, sociology, and history, each of whom makes a new argument for rethinking the relationship between cities and the larger project of state-building. Each chapter shows explicitly how the American city demonstrates durable shifts in governing authority throughout the nation’s history. By filling an important gap in scholarship the book will thus become an indispensable part of the American political development canon, a crucial component of graduate and undergraduate courses in APD, urban politics, urban sociology, and urban history, and a key guide for future scholarship.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction: Bringing the City Back In

ByRICHARDSON DILWORTH

part |2 pages

Part I American Exceptionalism and the City

part |2 pages

Part II Rethinking Urban Politics

chapter 4|21 pages

Challenging the Machine–Reform Dichotomy: Two Threats to Urban Democracy

ByJESSICA TROUNSTINE

chapter 5|21 pages

Through a Glass Darkly: The Once and Future Study of Urban Politics

ByCLARENCE N. STONE, ROBERT K. WHELAN

part |2 pages

Part III City, Space, and Nation

chapter 7|13 pages

Urban Space and American Political Development: Identity, Interest, Action

ByCLARISSA RILE HAYWARD

chapter 8|23 pages

Placing American Political Development: Cities, Regions, and Regimes, 1789–2008

ByPHILIP J. ETHINGTON, DAVID P. LEVITUS

part |2 pages

Part IV The National Significance of Urban Immigrant, Racial, and Ethnic Politics

chapter 9|21 pages

Riots as Critical Junctures

ByMICHAEL JONES-CORREA

chapter 10|25 pages

Roots: Baltimore’s Long March to the Era of Civil Rights

ByMATTHEW A. CRENSON