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U.S. URBAN POLICY: THE POSTWAR STATE AND CAPITALIST REGULATION
Authors:RICHARD FLORIDA†  REW JONAS‡
Institution:Center for Economic Development, School of Urban and Public Affairs, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh PA 15206.;Department of Earth Sciences, University of California, Riverside CA 92521.
Abstract:This paper provides an historically grounded theory of U.S. urban policy which is informed by regulationist theory and recent contributions to the theory of the State. It is shown how the content and form of urban policy in the New Deal, was shaped by the rise of mass-production Fordism and informed by the particular struggles that emerged in the United States during the formative period of the 1930s and 1940s. These struggles produced a particular State policy response, setting in place a limited and constrained mode of State intervention in the economy. In the realm of urban policy, this narrow form of State intervention set limits on further rounds of State policy, leaving the U.S. State unable to respond in an effective way to the mounting economic crises of the 1970s and the 1980s, contributing to the so-called "failure" of urban policy.
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