- Shopping Bag ( 0 items )
- Spend $25, Get FREE SHIPPING
List Price
$27.50
Textbook Details
Used & New From our Trusted Marketplace Sellers
To try again, please visit the B&N Marketplace.
Stephen Skowronek's wholly innovative study demonstrates that presidents are persistent agents of change, continually disrupting and transforming the political landscape. In an afterword to this new edition, the author examines "third way" leadership as it has been practiced by Bill Clinton and others. These leaders are neither great repudiators nor orthodox innovators. They challenge received political categories, mix seemingly antithetical doctrines, and often take their opponents' issues as their own. As the 1996 election confirmed, third way leadership has great electoral appeal. The question is whether Clinton in his second term will escape the convulsive end so often associated with the type.
More Reviews and RecommendationsStephen Skowronek is Professor of Political Science at Yale University. He is the author of Building a New American State: The Expansion of National Administrative Capacities, 1877-1920.
A work of great insight...This is a book that kicks aside all the conventional ways of thinking about presidential leadership and erects a daring, powerful, analytic machine that compels attention.
Preface, 1997
I. PLACES IN HISTORY
1. Rethinking Presidential History
2. Power and Authority
3. Structure and Action
II. RECURRENT AND EMERGENT PATTERNS
4. Jeffersonian Leadership: Patrician Prototypes
Part One: Thomas Jefferson's Reconstruction
Part Two: James Monroe's Articulation
Part Three: John Quincy Adams's Disjunction
5. Jacksonian Leadership: Classic Forms
Part One: Andrew Jackson's Reconstruction
Part Two: James Polk's Articulation
Part Three: Franklin Pierce's Disjunction
6. Republican Leadership: Stiffening Crosscurrents
Part One: Abraham Lincoln's Reconstruction
Part Two: Theodore Roosevelt's Articulation
Part Three: Herbert Hoover's Disjunction
7. Liberal Leadership: Fraying Boundaries
Part One: Franklin Roosevelt's Reconstruction
Part Two: Lyndon Johnson's Articulation
Part Three: Jimmy Carter's Disjunction
III. THE WANING OF POLITICAL TIME
8. Reagan, Bush, and Beyond
Afterward
Notes
Index
To try again, please visit the B&N Marketplace.



