Volume 18, Number 1: Winter 2006
Special Issue: Ruling Passions: Political Economy in Nineteenth-Century America Richard Johns - Editor
Articles
Ruling Passions: Political Economy in Nineteenth-Century America
Institutional Reality in the Age of Slavery: Taxation and Democracy in the States
The Politics of Procurement: Military Origins of Bureaucratic Autonomy
Promotion, Competition, Captivity: The Political Economy of Coal
Patent Politics: Intellectual Property, the Railroad Industry, and the Problem of Monopoly
Protecting Small Savers: The Political Economy of Economic Security [End Page 483]
Did Insecure Property Rights Slow Economic Development? Some Lessons from Economic History
Volume 18, Number 2: Spring 2006
Articles
Community Capitalism: How Housing Advocates, the Private Sector, and Government Forged New Low-Income Housing Policy, 1968–1996
Swing Issues and Policy Regimes: Federal Education Policy and the Politics of Policy Change
From Biracial Democracy to Direct Rule: The End of Self-Government in the Nation's Capital, 1865–1878
Book Reviews
A Review of Elizabeth Sanders, Roots of Reform: Farmers, Workers, and the American State, 1877–1917 [End Page 484]
Volume 18, Number 3: Summer 2006
Articles
Rethinking the Bonus March: Federal Bonus Policy, the Veterans of Foreign Wars, and the Origins of a Protest Movement
The Best Defense Is a Good Offense: The Stennis Amendment and the Fracturing of Liberal School Desegregation Policy, 1964–1972
Public Policies for Countering Deindustrialization in Postwar Massachusetts
The Historical Trajectory of Civil Rights Enforcement in Health Care
Volume 18, Number 4: Fall 2006
Articles
Water Planning in the Progressive Era: The Inland Waterways Commission Reconsidered
Compulsory Arbitration and the Australasian Model of State Development: Policy Transfer, Learning, and Innovation [End Page 485]
Racial Liberalism, Affirmative Action, and the Troubled History of the President's Committee on Government Contracts
Book Reviews
Disability Policy
John Fabian Witt, The Accidental Republic: Crippled Workingmen, Destitute Widows, and the Remaking of American Law
Ruth O'Brien, Crippled Justice: The History of Modern Disability Policy in the Workplace