Party Polarization in America
The War Over Two Social Contracts
B Dan Wood author Soren Jordan author
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:18th Aug '17
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This book shows that party polarization in America is the norm, not the exception, and is rooted in class-based conflict characterizing all of American history.
This book is for students of party polarization in America. Prior studies focused exclusively on the present, but this study traces party polarization through historical analysis from 1787 to the present. It shows polarization is the norm, not the exception, and is rooted in class-based conflict characterizing all of American history.This book develops a general explanation for party polarization in America from both historical and contemporary perspectives. Prior polarization studies focused exclusively on the modern era, but this work traces party polarization from the constitutional convention of 1787 to the present. Using such a broad historical perspective shows that what was unusual in American history was the period of low polarization from the Great Depression through 1980, rather than the period of high polarization of the modern era. Polarization is the norm of the American system, not the exception, and is likely to persist in the future. More theoretically, party polarization in America has been due to class-based conflict and rent-seeking by the patrician and plebian classes in various historical eras, rather than conflict over cultural values. As in earlier historical eras, modern party polarization has largely been elite-driven, with party entrepreneurs cunningly and strategically using polarization to their advantage.
ISBN: 9781107195929
Dimensions: 240mm x 167mm x 26mm
Weight: 670g
388 pages