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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Paul Sabin (Yale University)Publisher: WW Norton & Co Imprint: WW Norton & Co Dimensions: Width: 16.00cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 23.90cm Weight: 0.459kg ISBN: 9780393634044ISBN 10: 0393634043 Pages: 272 Publication Date: 17 August 2021 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsReviews[Sabin's] cogent history is timely and likely to be enduring. An insightful and squirm-inducing account of how the good guys won and then lost. -- Kirkus Reviews (starred) Sabin crafts a coherent historical narrative out of the alphabet soup of government agencies and public interest groups, and sheds light on major developments in American politics. This deep dive delivers plenty of rewards. -- Publishers Weekly This book could not be more timely. Paul Sabin powerfully demonstrates that the liberal postwar order was not only undercut by the rise of the right, but also by an activist left that for good reason decried government's deafness to citizens' needs and participation. How best to serve the public interest is the greatest challenge of our time, and we could have no better guide through the historical thicket than Sabin. -- Lizabeth Cohen, author of Saving America's Cities Paul Sabin's history of America's 1960s and '70s is directly relevant to the country's civic, political, and ethical choices in the decades ahead. This is a surprising, insightful, and lastingly useful book. -- James Fallows, author of Our Towns Astute and nuanced, Paul Sabin uses Ralph Nader and the public interest movement he helped spawn to tell a fascinating story of American governance and the limits of markets, regulation, and citizen action. -- Richard White, author of Railroaded Paul Sabin has written a fascinating account of the forgotten history of public interest liberalism. Looking back at Ralph Nader and allied good government warriors, Sabin offers a powerful reminder that the attack on big government didn't just come from the right but the left as well. -- Julian Zelizer, author of Burning Down the House Long before 'the Reagan Revolution,' an army of citizen activists launched a searing attack on liberalism, big government, and the administrative state-and helped pave the way for market-oriented conservatism. Paul Sabin's timely, provocative, and deeply ironic account should be required reading for everyone interested in environmentalism, consumerism, political economy, and the 1970s. -- Laura Kalman, author of The Long Reach of the Sixties This book could not be more timely. Paul Sabin powerfully demonstrates that the liberal postwar order was not only undercut by the rise of the right, but also by an activist left that for good reason decried government's deafness to citizens' needs and participation. How best to serve the public interest is the greatest challenge of our time, and we could have no better guide through the historical thicket than Sabin. -- Lizabeth Cohen, author of Saving America's Cities Paul Sabin's history of America's 1960s and '70s is directly relevant to the country's civic, political, and ethical choices in the decades ahead. This is a surprising, insightful, and lastingly useful book. -- James Fallows, author of Our Towns Astute and nuanced, Paul Sabin uses Ralph Nader and the public interest movement he helped spawn to tell a fascinating story of American governance and the limits of markets, regulation, and citizen action. -- Richard White, author of Railroaded Paul Sabin has written a fascinating account of the forgotten history of public interest liberalism. Looking back at Ralph Nader and allied good government warriors, Sabin offers a powerful reminder that the attack on big government didn't just come from the right but the left as well. -- Julian Zelizer, author of Burning Down the House Long before 'the Reagan Revolution,' an army of citizen activists launched a searing attack on liberalism, big government, and the administrative state-and helped pave the way for market-oriented conservatism. Paul Sabin's timely, provocative, and deeply ironic account should be required reading for everyone interested in environmentalism, consumerism, political economy, and the 1970s. -- Laura Kalman, author of The Long Reach of the Sixties Crisp, clear, eloquent, and carefully focused on the political changes of the 1970s. -- Kim Phillips-Fein, The New Republic [Sabin's] cogent history is timely and likely to be enduring. An insightful and squirm-inducing account of how the good guys won and then lost. -- Kirkus Reviews (starred) Sabin crafts a coherent historical narrative out of the alphabet soup of government agencies and public interest groups, and sheds light on major developments in American politics. This deep dive delivers plenty of rewards. -- Publishers Weekly This book could not be more timely. Paul Sabin powerfully demonstrates that the liberal postwar order was not only undercut by the rise of the right, but also by an activist left that for good reason decried government's deafness to citizens' needs and participation. How best to serve the public interest is the greatest challenge of our time, and we could have no better guide through the historical thicket than Sabin. -- Lizabeth Cohen, author of Saving America's Cities Paul Sabin's history of America's 1960s and '70s is directly relevant to the country's civic, political, and ethical choices in the decades ahead. This is a surprising, insightful, and lastingly useful book. -- James Fallows, author of Our Towns Astute and nuanced, Paul Sabin uses Ralph Nader and the public interest movement he helped spawn to tell a fascinating story of American governance and the limits of markets, regulation, and citizen action. -- Richard White, author of Railroaded Paul Sabin has written a fascinating account of the forgotten history of public interest liberalism. Looking back at Ralph Nader and allied good government warriors, Sabin offers a powerful reminder that the attack on big government didn't just come from the right but the left as well. -- Julian Zelizer, author of Burning Down the House Long before 'the Reagan Revolution,' an army of citizen activists launched a searing attack on liberalism, big government, and the administrative state-and helped pave the way for market-oriented conservatism. Paul Sabin's timely, provocative, and deeply ironic account should be required reading for everyone interested in environmentalism, consumerism, political economy, and the 1970s. -- Laura Kalman, author of The Long Reach of the Sixties Author InformationPaul Sabin is the Randolph W. Townsend, Jr. Professor of History at Yale University and director of the Yale Environmental Humanities Program. He is the author of The Bet. He lives in New Haven, Connecticut. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |