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The Sustaining Hand: Community Leadership and Corporate Power?second Edition, Revised (Studies in Government and Public Policy)
Description
As the recent shake-up at GM underscores, the new global economy has widened the cracks and stresses in the American auto industry. But, as this new edition of the highly regarded Sustaining Hand reminds us, the auto industry remains a central if volatile player in American urban politics.
In this significantly revised update, Bryan Jones and Lynn Bachelor have extended and refined their analysis of Detroit-area automakers and political leaders negotiating the selection of new factory sites (and thus the addition of thousands of jobs to the local economy). Their thorough revision develops a crucial new concept--solution sets--updates all plant location decisions reported in the first edition, and adds an instructive new case study--the Chrysler Jefferson Avenue plant in Detroit.
This book seeks to uncover the linkages between business leaders(motivated by profit) and political decision makers (motivated by electoral gain) by examining the responses of public officials in three Michigan "auto cities"--Detroit, Flint, and Pontiac--to plant-location choices made by General Motors and Chrysler. Throughout, the authors focus on three issues-the relationship between the local industrial economy and the local political system, the structure of urban politics, and the degree of independence of political decision makers in urban affairs.
As Jones and Bachelor show, urban regimes, in their efforts to shore up sagging economies, develop characteristic solution-sets that are applied almost routinely to superficially similar situations. In fact, they contend, it's rare for a regime to start with a problem and search for a policy solution. Instead, through a pattern of interactions among politicians, business executives, labor unions, and other interested parties, a "package" of problem-definitions and preferred solutions emerges. But if applied indiscriminately, these solutions can become dysfunctional, which in turn may attract new participants to the policy process and ultimately alter the regime's character.
"An excellent case analysis of urban political economy. . . interesting, sophisticated, well written. It is sure to be widely discussed."--Clarence N. Stone, author of Urban Policy and Politics in a Bureaucratic Age and Economic Growth and Neighborhood Discontent.
"This new version makes significant new contributions to both the urban politics and public policy literatures, and indeed marries them in an utterly unique way. The concept of solution sets is brilliant, and I assume that it will be much discussed and utilized in the urban literature."--Dennis Judd, author of The Politics of American Cities: Private Power and Public Policy.
Praise for the first edition:
"An excellent book. The authors demonstrate a considerable capacity for theoretical innovation and a rare appreciation of the detail and complexity of local economic development. This book is a model for those who would like to situate the local economic development process in a more general analytical framework."--Urban Studies
"A provocative addition to the literature"--Choice
Other Books in Series
Executive Privilege: The Use and Abuse of Presidential Secrecy from Washington to Trump (Studies in Government and Public Policy)
Bankrupting Democracy: Campaign Spending in a Marketplace of Ideas (Studies in Government and Public Policy)
Bankrupting Democracy: Campaign Spending in a Marketplace of Ideas (Studies in Government and Public Policy)
Global Public Leadership for an Inclusive and Innovative Future: Issues, Models, and Strategies in the Era of Globalization 4.1 (Routledge Studies in Governance and Public Policy)
All Roads Lead to Power: The Appointed and Elected Paths to Public Office for Us Women (Studies in Government and Public Policy)
Counting Like a State: How Intergovernmental Partnerships Shaped the 2020 Us Census (Studies in Government and Public Policy)
Environment, Inc.: From Grassroots to Beltway (Studies in Government and Public Policy)
The Worst Tax?: A History of the Property Tax in America (Studies in Government and Public Policy)
Building Civic Capacity (Studies in Government and Public Policy)
To Run a Constitution (Studies in Government and Public Policy)
Developing Interests: Organizational Change and the Politics of Advocacy (Studies in Government and Public Policy)
Presidential Lightning Rods: The Politics of Blame Avoidance (Studies in Government and Public Policy)
The Vanishing Farmland Crisis: Critical Views of the Movement to Preserve Agricultural Land (Studies in Government and Public Policy)
The Cost of Voting in the American States (Studies in Government and Public Policy)
Black Social Capital: The Politics of School Reform in Baltimore, 1986-1999 (Studies in Government and Public Policy)
Left Coast City: Progressive Politics in San Francisco, 1975-1991 (Studies in Government and Public Policy)
Politics of Problem Definition: Shaping the Policy Agenda (Studies in Government and Public Policy)
The President's Czars: Undermining Congress and the Constitution (Studies in Government and Public Policy)
