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Abstract
"Of all the questions that might be asked about political life, it would be difficult to find one of greater interest than the ancient query: who rules over whom? It appeals powerfully to our curiosity. We want to know who ""runs"" things--who makes policy decisions in New York, Washington, London, or the town in which we live. Is it a single powerful individual, an economic elite, a series of elites, the citizens, political bosses, or some variant of these possibilities?The major purpose of this volume is to find an answer to this question for a small American city, and to extend the answer through relevant theory to American cities in general. But much more precisely, answers are sought for these interrelated questions: What are the relationships between the rulers and the ruled? How are the rulers related to each other? Are the rulers the same for all policies or do they differ from one area of policy to another? How do leaders arise, and in what way are they different from other people?The issues discussed in this volume are familiar to many towns. They range from controversies about the building of a new water system to housing and zoning codes, from charity appeals to low-income housing, from nominations and elections to industrial development and off-street parking. Wildavsky draws parallels to other community studies and formulates general propositions in support of his thesis that American communities are pluralist. And ultimately, Wildavsky is optimistic that small towns foster citizen participation, giving the population more of a chance to direct its own future. Aaron Wildavsky was, until his death in 1993, professor of political science and public policy at the University of California, Berkeley, and, while working on the present study, taught at Oberlin College. Transaction has posthumously published Wildavsky's complete essays and papers in five volumes. Nelson W. Polsby is Heller Professor of Political Science at the University of California, Berkeley, wh"--Provided by publisher.
Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Transaction Introduction -- Acknowledgments -- 1 Rival Theories and a Method for Choosing Among Them -- 2 The Citizens of Oberlin -- 3 Oberlin in the Past -- 4 The Great Water Controversy -- 5 The Light Plant -- 6 The Housing Code -- 7 Enforcement of the Housing Code -- 8 Negroes and Low-Cost Housing -- 9 Enforcement of the Zoning Ordinance: The Gibson Case -- 10 The Coming of the FAA -- 11 The Oberlin Improvement and Development Corporation -- 12 The History of the Oberlin Off-Street Parking Corporation -- 13 Multiples of Six: Nomination and Election in 1959 -- 14 Co-optation -- 15 The United Appeal -- 16 The Oberlin City Manager -- 17 Bill Long: Portrait of an Activist -- 18 Who Rules in Oberlin and Why -- 19 How Leaders Differ From Other People -- 20 What's In a Reputation? -- 21 On the Advantages of Living in 1 Mass Society -- 22 Why American Cities Are Pluralist -- 23 A Strategy of Political Participation -- Notes -- Index
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