Description
Book SynopsisArgues that the state in America is rooted in the country's colonial experience and analyses the evidence for this by reviewing governance at all levels of the American polity - local, state, and national - between 1754 and 1920.
Trade ReviewThe myth of a weak American state in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries is resilient and persistent despite a deep and distinguished scholarly effort to dislodge it. In this accessibly written book, Ballard Campbell draws on this literature, including his own important contributions to it, to make a compelling argument about the power of American government at all levels and why the myth has been hard to shake. Both scholars and general readers will profit from engaging with Campbell's book." - Paula Baker, associate professor of history, Ohio State University
"Synthesizing wide-ranging scholarship, Campbell traces the evolution of governance and the growth of the state in the United States during the long nineteenth century. He posits a paradox between the limited-government antistatist ideology prevalent throughout American history and the inexorable growth in the power, scope, and expense of government at all levels. He argues that the expansion of government found increasing public acceptance because of a growing perception of government’s role in remedying problems arising from either crises or long-term economic and social change. Campbell’s expertise in the history of state and local governance adds a dimension to the story that other scholars often overlook." - Charles W. Calhoun, author of
The Presidency of Ulysses S. Grant"Despite a pronounced anti-statist tradition in the United States, the state grew in functional scope, financial commitment, capacity, and power during the long nineteenth century. In this engaging and accessible book, historians, political scientists, and general readers are offered a rich and careful examination of the growth of governance not only at the national level but also, crucially, at the municipal and state levels. Looking at the major engines of state-building, Campbell finds that most decisions to use governmental power were practical actions undertaken in response to problems and demands, which built public acceptance of civic interventions." - Carol Nackenoff, Richter Professor of Political Science, Swarthmore College, and coauthor of
American by Birth: Wong Kim Ark and the Battle for Citizenship