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Books in the Center for the Study of the History of Liberty in America series

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  • by David J Rothman
    £61.49

    No detailed description available for "Politics and Power".

  • by Roger Lane
    £61.49

    No detailed description available for "Policing the City".

  • by Winton U Solberg
    £61.49

    No detailed description available for "Redeem the Time".

  • by Paul Goodman
    £61.49

    No detailed description available for "The Democratic-Republicans of Massachusetts".

  • by Sidney H Aronson
    £61.49

    No detailed description available for "Status and Kinship in the Higher Civil Service".

  • by Yehoshua Arieli
    £61.49

    No detailed description available for "Individualism and Nationalism in American Ideology".

  • by Sydney V James
    £61.49

    No detailed description available for "A People among Peoples".

  • by Oscar Handlin & Mary Handlin
    £61.49

    Using the ability of the individual to take action as a working measure of the extent of liberty at any time, Oscar Handlin and Mary Handlin identify and describe numerous factors that have had an important effect on American freedom since colonial days. In defining the broad dimensions of the conception, they investigate, among other subjects, the significance of the idea that the state derived power from the consent of the governed, the early concept of the Commonwealth, the later one of police powers, the roles played by governmental institutions, churches, secret lodges, voluntary associations of all kinds, immigration, the professions, continuing social and physical mobility, and the growth of wealth.

  • by Professor Emeritus of History Morton Keller
    £61.49

    This book examines the critical period in the development of the modern life insurance business. The discussion of ideology, managerial and business techniques, the foreign market, investment policies, and government regulation centers on the Big Five. The New York Life, Equitable Life, Mutual Life, and Metropolitan Life insurance companies in New York and the Prudential Insurance Company in Newark at the end of the nineteenth century possessed enormous power. Their problem was how to accommodate themselves to the conditions of a free society.Keller vividly portrays the quest for power of a late-nineteenth-century American corporate group -- their sophisticated business, marketing, and investment techniques; the attempt to persuade the State Department and its ambassadors to assist American companies expanding into the foreign market; and the use of the enterprise's substantial assets to influence state and federal regulation. Finally, he sketches the beginning of the end of power with the Armstrong Investigation of 1905 and the legislation that followed.

  • by Stephen Salsbury
    £61.49

    No detailed description available for "The State, the Investor, and the Railroad".

  • by Roy Lubove
    £61.49

    No detailed description available for "The Professional Altruist".

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