The Road to Inequality shows how policies that shape geographic space change our politics, focusing on the effects of the largest public works project in American history: the federal highway system. For decades, federally subsidized highways have selectively facilitated migration into fast-growing suburbs, producing an increasingly non-urban Republican electorate. This book examines the highway programs’ policy origins at the national level and traces how these intersected with local politics and interests to facilitate complex, mutually-reinforcing processes that have shaped America’s growing urban-suburban divide and, with it, the politics of metropolitan public investment. As Americans have become more polarized on urban-suburban lines, attitudes towards transportation policy – a once quintessentially ‘local’ and non-partisan policy area – are now themselves driven by partisanship, endangering investments in metropolitan programs that provide access to opportunity for millions of Americans.
The Road to Inequality
R519,13
Categories: Biography & True Stories, Education & Reference, History, Humanities, Reference
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ISBN | 9781108280976 |
File Size | 3.51 mb |
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Published | 22-03-2018 |