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- catalog contributor b850626.
- catalog created "[1971, c1972]".
- catalog date "1971".
- catalog date "[1971, c1972]".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "[1971, c1972]".
- catalog description "Bibliography (p. 155-158).".
- catalog description "Setting the stereotype, by J. Bryce.--Why the ward boss rules, by J. Addams.--The shame of the cities, by L. Steffens.--Bosses preserve the Nation, by G. W. Plunkitt.--The latent functions of the machine, by R. K. Merton.--The study of corruption, by E. L. McKitrick.--The manifest functions of the machine, by M. A. Calvert.--Boss Tweed's New York, by S. Mandelbaum.--The Urban politician as entrepreneur, by J. A. Tarr.--The periphery versus the center, by R. C. Wade.--Boss Cox's Cincinnati, by Z. L. Miller.--Boss Murphy and progressive reform, by J. J. Huthmacher.--The reformer as machine politician, by M. G. Holli.--The settlement worker versus the ward boss, by A. F. Davis.--Business elite and the centralization of decision-making, by S. P. Hays.--Businessmen and the city commission and manager movements, by J. Weinstein.--Socialism in Schenectady, by L. H. Pink.--Victor L. Berger, Socialist boss of Milwaukee, by D. A. Shannon.--The Pittsburgh Renaissance--an example of the reverse welfare state, by R. Lubove.--Bibliography (p. 155-158)".
- catalog extent "xviii, 158 p.".
- catalog hasFormat "Urban bosses, machines, and progressive reformers.".
- catalog identifier "0669737836".
- catalog isFormatOf "Urban bosses, machines, and progressive reformers.".
- catalog isPartOf "Problems in American civilization".
- catalog issued "1971".
- catalog issued "[1971, c1972]".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Lexington, Mass., Heath".
- catalog relation "Urban bosses, machines, and progressive reformers.".
- catalog spatial "United States.".
- catalog subject "JS401 .S7".
- catalog subject "Municipal government United States.".
- catalog subject "Political corruption United States.".
- catalog subject "Progressivism (United States politics)".
- catalog tableOfContents "Setting the stereotype, by J. Bryce.--Why the ward boss rules, by J. Addams.--The shame of the cities, by L. Steffens.--Bosses preserve the Nation, by G. W. Plunkitt.--The latent functions of the machine, by R. K. Merton.--The study of corruption, by E. L. McKitrick.--The manifest functions of the machine, by M. A. Calvert.--Boss Tweed's New York, by S. Mandelbaum.--The Urban politician as entrepreneur, by J. A. Tarr.--The periphery versus the center, by R. C. Wade.--Boss Cox's Cincinnati, by Z. L. Miller.--Boss Murphy and progressive reform, by J. J. Huthmacher.--The reformer as machine politician, by M. G. Holli.--The settlement worker versus the ward boss, by A. F. Davis.--Business elite and the centralization of decision-making, by S. P. Hays.--Businessmen and the city commission and manager movements, by J. Weinstein.--Socialism in Schenectady, by L. H. Pink.--Victor L. Berger, Socialist boss of Milwaukee, by D. A. Shannon.--The Pittsburgh Renaissance--an example of the reverse welfare state, by R. Lubove.--Bibliography (p. 155-158)".
- catalog title "Urban bosses, machines, and progressive reformers. Edited and with an introd. by Bruce M. Stave.".
- catalog type "text".