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Inequalities and the Progressive Era
Breakthroughs and Legacies
Edited by Guillaume Vallet
Inequalities and the Progressive Era features contributors from all corners of the world, each exploring a different type of inequality during the ‘Progressive Era’ (1890s-1930s). Though this era is most associated with the United States, it corresponds to a historical period in which profound changes and progress are realized or expected all over the globe.
Monograph Book
- Published in print:
- 26 Jun 2020
- ISBN:
- 9781788972642
- eISBN:
- 9781788972659
- Pages:
- 360
Show Summary Details
- Inequalities and the Progressive Era
- Copyright
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Chapter 1: The question of inequalities during the Progressive Era in the United States: the Golden Mean program of the economist Richard T. Ely
- Chapter 2: The progressive view of Old Institutionalism: business ethics, industrial democracy and reasonable capitalism
- Chapter 3: Inequalities and the dynamics of capitalism: will democracy survive? Albion W. Smalls view
- Chapter 4: Forgetting and remembering the Chicago School of Columbus, Ohio: Roderick D. Mckenzie, neighborhoods and inequality
- Chapter 5: Progressive values and institutional realities at The New School for Social Research
- Chapter 6: Progressive economic thought in interwar Australia
- Chapter 7: Repeated disappearance: why was progressivism forgotten in Japanese economics?
- Chapter 8: Income inequality: a turning point, 1880–1930
- Chapter 9: Inequalities in the United Kingdom: the Progressive Era, 1890s–1920s
- Chapter 10: Distribution as a macroeconomic problem
- Chapter 11: Land ownership as a mechanism for the reproduction of inequality in Ecuador from 1895 to the 1920s
- Chapter 12: Peasants, inequality and progress in the research of Alexander Chayanov: Russia and the world
- Chapter 13: Broadacre City: Frank Lloyd Wrights vision of an organic capitalism
- Chapter 14: The tariff question, the labor question, and Henry Georges triangulation
- Chapter 15: Schumpeters view of social inequalities
- Chapter 16: W. E. B. Du Bois on poverty and racial inequality
- Chapter 17: A reconsideration of James Africanus Beale Horton of Sierra Leone (1835–1883) and his legacy
- Chapter 18: Sol Plaatje: an intellectual giant in the twentieth-century history of black South Africa
- Chapter 19: Stephen Leacock on political economy and the unsolved riddle of social justice
- Chapter 20: Trailblazing feminists at the turn of the twentieth century: a focus on Marianne Weber and Lou Andreas-Salom
- Chapter 21: Silvio Gesells vision on monetary reform: how to reduce social inequalities
- Chapter 22: Football culture and sports history in Latin America: from the Progressive Era to contemporary times
- Index
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Introduction
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- Inequalities and the Progressive Era
- Copyright
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Chapter 1: The question of inequalities during the Progressive Era in the United States: the Golden Mean program of the economist Richard T. Ely
- Chapter 2: The progressive view of Old Institutionalism: business ethics, industrial democracy and reasonable capitalism
- Chapter 3: Inequalities and the dynamics of capitalism: will democracy survive? Albion W. Smalls view
- Chapter 4: Forgetting and remembering the Chicago School of Columbus, Ohio: Roderick D. Mckenzie, neighborhoods and inequality
- Chapter 5: Progressive values and institutional realities at The New School for Social Research
- Chapter 6: Progressive economic thought in interwar Australia
- Chapter 7: Repeated disappearance: why was progressivism forgotten in Japanese economics?
- Chapter 8: Income inequality: a turning point, 1880–1930
- Chapter 9: Inequalities in the United Kingdom: the Progressive Era, 1890s–1920s
- Chapter 10: Distribution as a macroeconomic problem
- Chapter 11: Land ownership as a mechanism for the reproduction of inequality in Ecuador from 1895 to the 1920s
- Chapter 12: Peasants, inequality and progress in the research of Alexander Chayanov: Russia and the world
- Chapter 13: Broadacre City: Frank Lloyd Wrights vision of an organic capitalism
- Chapter 14: The tariff question, the labor question, and Henry Georges triangulation
- Chapter 15: Schumpeters view of social inequalities
- Chapter 16: W. E. B. Du Bois on poverty and racial inequality
- Chapter 17: A reconsideration of James Africanus Beale Horton of Sierra Leone (1835–1883) and his legacy
- Chapter 18: Sol Plaatje: an intellectual giant in the twentieth-century history of black South Africa
- Chapter 19: Stephen Leacock on political economy and the unsolved riddle of social justice
- Chapter 20: Trailblazing feminists at the turn of the twentieth century: a focus on Marianne Weber and Lou Andreas-Salom
- Chapter 21: Silvio Gesells vision on monetary reform: how to reduce social inequalities
- Chapter 22: Football culture and sports history in Latin America: from the Progressive Era to contemporary times
- Index