Cengage Advantage Books: Liberty, Equality, Power A History of the American People, Volume II: Since 1863, Compact
, by Murrin, John M.; Johnson, Paul E.; McPherson, James M.; Fahs, Alice; Gerstle, Gary- ISBN: 9780495411031 | 0495411035
- Cover: Paperback
- Copyright: 5/24/2007
Maps | p. xvii |
History through film | p. xvii |
To the Student: Why Study History? | p. xix |
Preface | p. xxi |
Reconstruction, 1863-1877 | p. 625 |
Wartime Reconstruction | p. 625 |
Chronology | p. 626 |
Radical Republicans and Reconstruction | p. 627 |
Andrew Johnson and Reconstruction | p. 628 |
Johnson's Policy | p. 629 |
Southern Defiance | p. 630 |
The Black Codes | p. 631 |
Land and Labor in the Postwar South | p. 631 |
The Freedmen's Bureau | p. 632 |
Land for the Landless | p. 632 |
Education | p. 634 |
The Advent of Congressional Reconstruction | p. 634 |
Schism between President and Congress | p. 635 |
The 14th Amendment | p. 635 |
The 1866 Elections | p. 636 |
The Reconstruction Acts of 1867 | p. 636 |
The Impeachment of Andrew Johnson | p. 638 |
The Completion of Formal Reconstruction | p. 539 |
The 15th Amendment | p. 640 |
The Election of 1868 | p. 640 |
The Grant Administration | p. 641 |
Civil Service Reform | p. 642 |
Foreign Policy Issues | p. 643 |
Reconstruction in the South | p. 644 |
Blacks in Office | p. 644 |
"Carpetbaggers" | p. 645 |
"Scalawags" | p. 646 |
The Ku Klux Klan | p. 646 |
History Through Film The Birth of a Nation | p. 648 |
The Election of 1872 | p. 648 |
The Panic of 1873 | p. 650 |
The Retreat from Reconstruction | p. 650 |
The Mississippi Election of 1875 | p. 652 |
The Supreme Court and Reconstruction | p. 653 |
The Election of 1876 | p. 653 |
Disputed Results | p. 654 |
The Compromise of 1877 | p. 655 |
The End of Reconstruction | p. 656 |
Conclusion | p. 656 |
A Transformed Nation: The West and the New South, 1865-1900 | p. 659 |
The Homestead Act | p. 659 |
Chronology | p. 660 |
An Industrializing West | p. 661 |
Railroads | p. 662 |
Chinese Laborers and the Railroads | p. 663 |
The Golden Spike | p. 664 |
Railroads and Borderlands Communities | p. 665 |
Mining | p. 666 |
Ranching | p. 667 |
History Through Film Oklahoma! | p. 668 |
Cattle Drives and the Open Range | p. 668 |
The industrialization of Ranching | p. 671 |
Industrial Cowboys | p. 671 |
Mexican Americans | p. 671 |
Itinerant Laborers | p. 672 |
Homesteading and Farming | p. 673 |
The Experience of Homesteading | p. 673 |
Gender and Western Settlement | p. 675 |
Conquest and Resistance: American Indians in the Trans-Mississippi West | p. 675 |
Conflict with the Sioux | p. 676 |
Suppression of Other Plains Indians | p. 677 |
The "Peace Policy" | p. 678 |
The Dawes Severalty Act and Indian Boarding Schools | p. 679 |
The Ghost Dance | p. 680 |
Sitting Bull and Buffalo Bill: Popular Myths of the West | p. 680 |
Industrialization and the New South | p. 682 |
Race and Industrialization | p. 683 |
Southern Agriculture | p. 683 |
Exodusters and Emigrationists | p. 684 |
Race Relations in the New South | p. 685 |
The Emergence of an African American Middle Class | p. 686 |
The Rise of Jim Crow | p. 686 |
The Politics of Stalemate | p. 689 |
Knife-Edge Electoral Balance | p. 689 |
Civil Service Reform | p. 690 |
The Tariff Issue | p. 692 |
Conclusion | p. 692 |
The Emergence of Corporate America, 1865-1900 | p. 695 |
Chronology | p. 696 |
An Expansive and Volatile Economy | p. 697 |
Engines of Economic Growth | p. 698 |
Technological Innovation and Celebrations of the Machine | p. 699 |
Changes in Business Organization and Practice | p. 700 |
Wealth and Society | p. 703 |
Class Distinction and Cultural Hierarchy | p. 704 |
The Consolidation of Middle-class Culture | p. 704 |
White-Collar Workers | p. 705 |
The Middle-class Home | p. 706 |
Department Stores as Middle-class Communities of Taste | p. 706 |
Domesticity vs. Work | p. 707 |
The Women's Club Movement and Public Lives | p. 708 |
The New Woman | p. 708 |
Higher Education and Professional Organizations | p. 709 |
Middle-class Cultural Institutions | p. 709 |
Racial Hierarchy and the City: The 1893 Columbian Exhibition | p. 711 |
The City and Working-class Culture | p. 713 |
Working-class Women and Men | p. 713 |
Commercial Amusements | p. 713 |
Popular Literature | p. 714 |
Emergence of a National Culture | p. 715 |
Advertising | p. 715 |
A Shared Visual Culture | p. 716 |
Mail-order Catalogues | p. 717 |
Workers' Resistance to the New Corporate Order | p. 718 |
The Great Railroad Strike of 1877 | p. 719 |
The Knights of Labor | p. 719 |
Haymarket | p. 720 |
The Homestead Strike | p. 721 |
The Depression of 1893-1897 | p. 722 |
The Pullman Strike | p. 723 |
Farmers' Movements | p. 724 |
Resistance to Railroads | p. 724 |
Credit and Money | p. 726 |
The Greenback and Silver Movements | p. 727 |
Grangers and the Farmers' Alliance | p. 728 |
The Rise and Fall of the People's Party | p. 729 |
The Silver Issue | p. 730 |
The Election of 1896 | p. 731 |
Conclusion | p. 732 |
An Industrial Society, 1900-1920 | p. 735 |
Chronology | p. 736 |
Sources of Economic Growth | p. 736 |
Technology | p. 737 |
Corporate Growth | p. 738 |
Mass Production and Distribution | p. 738 |
Corporate Consolidation | p. 739 |
Revolution in Management | p. 740 |
Scientific Management on the Factory Floor | p. 741 |
"Robber Barons" No More | p. 744 |
Obsession with Physical and Racial Fitness | p. 745 |
Immigration | p. 746 |
European Immigration | p. 747 |
Chinese and Japanese Immigration | p. 749 |
Immigrant Labor | p. 751 |
Living Conditions | p. 753 |
Building Ethnic Communities | p. 754 |
A Network of Institutions | p. 754 |
The Emergence of an Ethnic Middle Class | p. 754 |
Political Machines and Organized Crime | p. 756 |
African American Labor and Community | p. 758 |
History Through Film The Jazz Singer | p. 760 |
Workers and Unions | p. 762 |
Samuel F. Gompers and the AFL | p. 762 |
"Big Bill" Haywood and the IWW | p. 754 |
The Joys of the City | p. 766 |
The New Sexuality and the Rise of Feminism | p. 767 |
Feminism | p. 767 |
Conclusion | p. 769 |
Progressivism | p. 771 |
Progressivism and the Protestant Spirit | p. 771 |
Chronology | p. 772 |
Muckrakers, Magazines, and the Turn toward "Realism" | p. 773 |
Settlement Houses and Women's Activism | p. 775 |
Hull House | p. 776 |
The Cultural Conservatism of Progressive Reformers | p. 778 |
A Nation of Clubwomen | p. 780 |
Socialism and Progressivism | p. 781 |
The Many Faces of Socialism | p. 781 |
Socialists and Progressives | p. 782 |
Municipal Reform | p. 783 |
The City Commission Plan | p. 783 |
The City Manager Plan | p. 783 |
The Costs of Reform | p. 784 |
Political Reform in the States | p. 784 |
Restoring Sovereignty to "the People" | p. 785 |
Creating a Virtuous Electorate | p. 785 |
The Australian Ballot | p. 785 |
Personal Registration Laws | p. 786 |
Disenfranchisement | p. 786 |
Disillusionment with the Electorate | p. 788 |
Woman Suffrage | p. 788 |
Economic and Social Reform in the States | p. 789 |
Robert La Follette and Wisconsin Progressivism | p. 790 |
Progressive Reform in New York | p. 791 |
A Renewed Campaign for Civil Rights | p. 792 |
The Failure of Accommodationism | p. 792 |
From the Niagara Movement to the NAACP | p. 793 |
National Reform | p. 795 |
The Roosevelt Presidency | p. 796 |
Regulating the Trusts | p. 796 |
Toward a "Square Deal" | p. 797 |
Expanding Government Power: The Economy | p. 797 |
Expanding Government Power: The Environment | p. 797 |
Progressivism: A Movement for the People? | p. 799 |
The Republicans: A Divided Party | p. 799 |
The Taft Presidency | p. 800 |
Battling Congress | p. 800 |
The Ballinger-Pinchot Controversy | p. 800 |
Roosevelt's Return | p. 801 |
The Bull Moose Campaign | p. 802 |
The Rise of Woodrow Wilson | p. 802 |
The Election of 1912 | p. 803 |
The Wilson Presidency | p. 804 |
Tariff Reform and a Progressive Income Tax | p. 804 |
The Federal Reserve Act | p. 804 |
From the New Freedom to the New Nationalism | p. 805 |
Conclusion | p. 807 |
Becoming a World Power, 1898-1917 | p. 809 |
Chronology | p. 810 |
The United States Looks Abroad | p. 810 |
Protestant Missionaries | p. 810 |
Businessmen | p. 811 |
Imperialists | p. 812 |
The Spanish-American War | p. 814 |
"A Splendid Little War" | p. 817 |
The United States Becomes a World Power | p. 821 |
The Debate over the Treaty of Paris | p. 822 |
The American-Filipino War | p. 823 |
Controlling Cuba and Puerto Rico | p. 824 |
China and the "Open Door" | p. 826 |
Theodore Roosevelt, Geopolitician | p. 828 |
The Roosevelt Corollary | p. 829 |
The Panama Canal | p. 829 |
Keeping the Peace in East Asia | p. 832 |
William Howard Taft, Dollar Diplomat | p. 834 |
Woodrow Wilson, Struggling Idealist | p. 835 |
Conclusion | p. 837 |
War and Society, 1914-1920 | p. 839 |
Europe's Descent into War | p. 840 |
Chronology | p. 840 |
American Neutrality | p. 842 |
Submarine Warfare | p. 843 |
The Peace Movement | p. 845 |
Wilson's Vision: "Peace without Victory" | p. 845 |
German Escalation | p. 847 |
American Intervention | p. 848 |
Mobilizing for "Total" War | p. 850 |
Organizing Industry | p. 851 |
Securing Workers, Keeping Labor Peace | p. 852 |
Raising an Army | p. 853 |
Paying the Bills | p. 856 |
Arousing Patriotic Ardor | p. 856 |
Wartime Repression | p. 857 |
The Failure of the International Peace | p. 861 |
The Paris Peace Conference and the Treaty of Versailles | p. 861 |
The League of Nations | p. 862 |
Wilson versus Lodge: The Fight over Ratification | p. 864 |
The Treaty's Final Defeat | p. 866 |
The Postwar Period: A Society in Convulsion | p. 867 |
Labor-Capital Conflict | p. 867 |
Radicals and the Red Scare | p. 868 |
History Through Film Reds | p. 870 |
Racial Conflict and the Rise of Black Nationalism | p. 871 |
Conclusion | p. 873 |
The 1920s | p. 875 |
Prosperity | p. 875 |
Chronology | p. 876 |
A Consumer Society | p. 877 |
A People's Capitalism | p. 878 |
The Rise of Advertising and Mass Marketing | p. 878 |
Changing Attitudes toward Marriage and Sexuality | p. 881 |
An Age of Celebrity | p. 881 |
Celebrating Business Civilisation | p. 882 |
Industrial Workers | p. 883 |
Women and Work | p. 885 |
The Women's Movement Adrift | p. 887 |
The Politics of Business | p. 888 |
Harding and the Politics of Personal Gain | p. 888 |
Coolidge and Laissez-Faire Politics | p. 890 |
Hoover and the Politics of Associationalism | p. 891 |
The Politics of Business Abroad | p. 892 |
Farmers, Small-Town Protestants, and Moral Traditionalists | p. 893 |
Agricultural Depression | p. 894 |
Cultural Dislocation | p. 895 |
Prohibition | p. 897 |
The Ku Klux Klan | p. 897 |
Immigration Restriction | p. 898 |
Fundamentalism versus Liberal Protestantism | p. 900 |
The Scopes Trial | p. 901 |
History Through Film Inherit the Wind | p. 902 |
Ethnic and Racial Communities | p. 904 |
European American Ethnics | p. 905 |
African Americans | p. 907 |
The Harlem Renaissance | p. 910 |
Mexican Americans | p. 911 |
The "Lost Generation" and Disillusioned Intellectuals | p. 914 |
Democracy on the Defensive | p. 915 |
Conclusion | p. 916 |
The Great Depression and the New Deal, 1929-1939 | p. 919 |
Chronology | p. 920 |
Causes of the Great Depression | p. 920 |
Stock Market Speculation | p. 921 |
Mistakes by the Federal Reserve Board | p. 921 |
An Ill-Advised Tariff | p. 921 |
A Maldistribution of Wealth | p. 922 |
Hoover: The Fall of a Self-Made Man | p. 923 |
Hoover's Program | p. 924 |
The Bonus Army | p. 925 |
A Culture in Crisis | p. 926 |
The Democratic Roosevelt | p. 928 |
An Early Life of Privilege | p. 928 |
Roosevelt Liberalism | p. 929 |
The First New Deal, 1933-1935 | p. 929 |
Saving the Banks | p. 932 |
Economic Relief | p. 932 |
Agricultural Reform | p. 933 |
Industrial Reform | p. 935 |
Rebuilding the Nation's Infrastructure | p. 937 |
The TVA Alternative | p. 937 |
The New Deal and Western Development | p. 938 |
Political Mobilization, Political Unrest, 1934-1935 | p. 940 |
Populist Critics of the New Deal | p. 941 |
Labor Protests | p. 942 |
Anger at the Polls | p. 943 |
Radical Third Parties | p. 943 |
The Second New Deal, 1935-1937 | p. 944 |
Philosophical Underpinnings | p. 944 |
Legislation | p. 945 |
Victory in 1936: The New Democratic Coalition | p. 945 |
Rhetoric Versus Reality | p. 947 |
Men, Women, and Reform | p. 948 |
Labor in Politics and Culture | p. 952 |
America's Minorities and the New Deal | p. 954 |
Eastern and Southern European Ethnics | p. 954 |
African Americans | p. 954 |
Mexican Americans | p. 955 |
American Indians | p. 956 |
The New Deal Abroad | p. 957 |
Stalemate, 1937-1940 | p. 959 |
The Court-Packing Fiasco | p. 959 |
The Recession of 1937-1938 | p. 960 |
Conclusion | p. 960 |
America during the Second World War | p. 963 |
The Road to War: Aggression and Response | p. 963 |
Chronology | p. 964 |
The Rise of Aggressor States | p. 964 |
U.S. Neutrality | p. 965 |
The Mounting Crisis | p. 956 |
The Outbreak of War in Europe | p. 967 |
The U.S. Response to War in Europe | p. 968 |
An "Arsenal of Democracy" | p. 972 |
Pearl Harbor | p. 973 |
Fighting the War in Europe | p. 974 |
Campaigns in North Africa and Italy | p. 976 |
Operation Overlord | p. 977 |
The Pacific Theater | p. 979 |
Seizing the Offensive in the Pacific | p. 979 |
China Policy | p. 980 |
U.S. Strategy in the Pacific | p. 980 |
A New President, the Atomic Bomb, and Japan's Surrender | p. 982 |
The War at Home: The Economy | p. 985 |
Government's Role in the Economy | p. 986 |
Business and Finance | p. 986 |
The Workforce | p. 988 |
The Labor Front | p. 990 |
Assessing Economic Change | p. 991 |
A New Role for Government? | p. 991 |
The War at Home: Social Issues and Social Movements | p. 992 |
Selling the War | p. 992 |
History Through Film Casablanca | p. 994 |
Gender Issues | p. 996 |
Racial Issues | p. 998 |
Social Movements | p. 1001 |
Shaping the Peace | p. 1003 |
International Organizations | p. 1004 |
Spheres of Interest and Postwar Settlements | p. 1005 |
Conclusion | p. 1007 |
The Age of Containment, 1946-1953 | p. 1009 |
Creating a National Security State, 1945-1949 | p. 1009 |
Chronology | p. 1010 |
Onset of the Cold War | p. 1010 |
Containment Abroad: The Truman Doctrine | p. 1012 |
Truman's Loyalty Program | p. 1013 |
The National Security Act, the Marshall Plan, and the Berlin Crisis | p. 1014 |
The Election of 1948 | p. 1016 |
The Era of the Korean War, 1949-1952 | p. 1018 |
NATO, China, and the Bomb | p. 1018 |
NSC-68 | p. 1019 |
The Korean War | p. 1020 |
Korea and Containment | p. 1022 |
Pursuing National Security at Home | p. 1025 |
Anticommunism and the U.S. Labor Movement | p. 1025 |
HUAC and the Search for Subversives | p. 1026 |
Targeting Difference | p. 1029 |
The "Great Fear" | p. 1030 |
McCarthyism | p. 1032 |
The National Security Constitution | p. 1033 |
Truman's Fair Deal | p. 1034 |
The Employment Act of 1946 and the Promise of Economic Growth | p. 1034 |
Shaping the Fair Deal | p. 1036 |
Civil Rights | p. 1038 |
Signs of a Changing Culture | p. 1040 |
The Baseball "Color Line" | p. 1040 |
New Suburban Developments | p. 1042 |
Postwar Hollywood | p. 1044 |
From Truman to Eisenhower | p. 1046 |
The Election of 1952 | p. 1047 |
A Soldier-Politician | p. 1047 |
Conclusion | p. 1048 |
Affluence and Its Discontents, 1953-1963 | p. 1051 |
Foreign Policy, 1953-1960 | p. 1051 |
Eisenhower Takes Command | p. 1051 |
Chronology | p. 1052 |
The New Look, Global Alliances, and Summitry | p. 1054 |
Covert Action and Economic Leverage | p. 1056 |
The United States and Third World Politics, 1953-1960 | p. 1057 |
Latin America | p. 1057 |
The Middle East, Asia, and Africa | p. 1058 |
Vietnam | p. 1059 |
Affluence: A "People of Plenty" | p. 1060 |
Economic Growth | p. 1061 |
Highways and Waterways | p. 1063 |
Labor-Management Accord | p. 1064 |
Political Pluralism | p. 1066 |
A Religious People | p. 1066 |
Discontents of Affluence | p. 1068 |
Conformity in an Affluent Society | p. 1069 |
Restive Youth | p. 1070 |
The Mass Culture Debate | p. 1072 |
Changing Gender Politics | p. 1073 |
The New Suburbs and Gender Ideals | p. 1073 |
Signs of Women's Changing Roles | p. 1075 |
The Fight against Discrimination, 1953-1960 | p. 1076 |
The Brown Cases, 1954-1955 | p. 1076 |
The Montgomery Bus Boycott and Martin Luther King, Jr. | p. 1079 |
The Politics of Civil Rights: From the Local to the Global | p. 1080 |
American Indian Policy | p. 1082 |
The Growth of Spanish-Speaking Populations | p. 1083 |
Urban-Suburban Issues | p. 1085 |
Debating the Role of Government, 1955-1960 | p. 1086 |
The New Conservatives | p. 1086 |
Advocates of a More Active Government | p. 1088 |
The Kennedy Years: Foreign Policy | p. 1091 |
The Election of 1960 | p. 1091 |
Kennedy's Foreign Policy Goals | p. 1093 |
Cuba and Berlin | p. 1093 |
Southeast Asia and "Flexible Response" | p. 1095 |
The Kennedy Years: Domestic Policy | p. 1096 |
Policy Making During the Early 1960s | p. 1097 |
The Civil-Rights Movement, 1960-1963 | p. 1097 |
Women's Issues | p. 1099 |
The Assassination of John F. Kennedy | p. 1100 |
Conclusion | p. 1100 |
America during Its Longest War, 1963-1974 | p. 1103 |
The Great Society | p. 1103 |
Chronology | p. 1104 |
Closing the New Frontier | p. 1105 |
The Election of 1964 | p. 1107 |
Lyndon Johnson's Great Society | p. 1109 |
Evaluating the Great Society | p. 1110 |
Escalation in Vietnam | p. 1112 |
The Gulf of Tonkin Resolution | p. 1112 |
The War Continues to Widen | p. 1114 |
The Media and the War | p. 1117 |
The War at Home | p. 1118 |
The Movement of Movements | p. 1118 |
Movements on College Campuses: A New Left | p. 1120 |
The Counterculture | p. 1122 |
African American Social Movements | p. 1124 |
History Through Film Malcolm X | p. 1124 |
The Antiwar Movement | p. 1129 |
1968 | p. 1132 |
Turmoil in Vietnam | p. 1132 |
Turmoil at Home | p. 1133 |
The Election of 1968 | p. 1135 |
The Nixon Years, 1969-1974 | p. 1136 |
Lawbreaking and Violence | p. 1135 |
A New President | p. 1137 |
The Economy | p. 1137 |
Social Policy | p. 1138 |
Environmentalism | p. 1140 |
Controversies over Rights | p. 1140 |
Foreign Policy under Nixon and Kissinger | p. 1143 |
Detente and Normalization | p. 1144 |
Vietnamization | p. 1144 |
The Aftermath of War | p. 1146 |
Expanding the Nixon Doctrine | p. 1147 |
The Wars of Watergate | p. 1148 |
The Election of 1972 | p. 1149 |
Nixon Pursued | p. 1150 |
Nixon's Final Days | p. 1151 |
Conclusion | p. 1152 |
Power and Politics, 1974-1992 | p. 1155 |
The Caretaker Presidency of Gerald Ford (1974-1977) | p. 1155 |
Chronology | p. 1156 |
Trying to Whip Inflation | p. 1157 |
Foreign Policy | p. 1157 |
The Election of 1976 | p. 1158 |
Jimmy Carter's One-Term Presidency (1977-1981) | p. 1158 |
Welfare and Energy Initiatives | p. 1159 |
A Faltering Economy | p. 1160 |
Negotiating Disputes Overseas | p. 1161 |
Campaigning for Human Rights Abroad | p. 1161 |
Confronting Problems in Iran and Afghanistan | p. 1162 |
A New Right | p. 1163 |
Ronald Reagan (1981-1989) | p. 1165 |
The Election of 1980 | p. 1166 |
A "New Morning in America" | p. 1167 |
Taxes, Supply-Side Economics, and the "Reagan Revolution" | p. 1168 |
Cutting Regulations and Welfare Measures | p. 1170 |
Routing the Democrats, 1984 | p. 1172 |
Reagan's Second Term | p. 1173 |
History Through Film the First Moviestar President | p. 1174 |
Renewing the Cold War | p. 1176 |
The Defense Buildup | p. 1176 |
Deploying Military Power | p. 1177 |
The Iran-Contra Controversy | p. 1178 |
The Beginning of the End of the Cold War | p. 1179 |
The First Bush Presidency (1989-1993) | p. 1180 |
The Election of 1988 | p. 1180 |
The End of the Cold War | p. 1181 |
The Persian Gulf War | p. 1183 |
The Election of 1992 | p. 1184 |
Movement Activism | p. 1185 |
Women's Issues | p. 1187 |
Sexual Politics | p. 1189 |
Race, Ethnicity, and Social Activism | p. 1191 |
Activism Among African Americans | p. 1192 |
Activism Among American Indians | p. 1193 |
Activism in Spanish-Speaking Communities | p. 1195 |
Activism Among Asian Americans | p. 1198 |
The Dilemmas of Antidiscrimination Efforts | p. 1199 |
Conclusion | p. 1201 |
Economic, Social, and Cultural Change in the Late 20th Century | p. 1203 |
A Changing People | p. 1203 |
An Aging, Shifting Population | p. 1203 |
Chronology | p. 1204 |
New Immigration | p. 1206 |
The Metropolitan Nation | p. 1209 |
Economic Change | p. 1211 |
New Technologies | p. 1211 |
Big Business | p. 1212 |
Postindustrial Restructuring | p. 1213 |
The Sports-Entertainment Complex | p. 1216 |
Media and Popular Culture | p. 1219 |
The Video Revolution | p. 1219 |
The "New Hollywood" | p. 1220 |
The Changing Media Environment | p. 1222 |
The New Mass Culture Debate | p. 1223 |
Another "Great Awakening" | p. 1225 |
Conclusion | p. 1229 |
Politics of Hope and Fear, 1993-2007 | p. 1231 |
The Presidency of Bill Clinton (1993-2001) | p. 1231 |
Clinton's First Two Years | p. 1232 |
Chronology | p. 1232 |
A Republican Congress, a Democratic White House | p. 1233 |
Victory and Impeachment | p. 1235 |
Environmental Policy | p. 1237 |
Post-Cold War Foreign Policy | p. 1238 |
Globalization | p. 1240 |
The Presidency of George W. Bush (2001-2007) | p. 1241 |
The Long Election | p. 1241 |
A Conservative Domestic Agenda | p. 1243 |
Foreign Policy Changes Course | p. 1244 |
Activism at Home during the Second Term | p. 1249 |
The Politics of National Security during the Second Term | p. 1253 |
Conclusion | p. 1257 |
Appendix | p. A-1 |
Glossary | p. G-1 |
Credits | p. C-1 |
Index | p. I-1 |
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.
The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.
Digital License
You are licensing a digital product for a set duration. Durations are set forth in the product description, with "Lifetime" typically meaning five (5) years of online access and permanent download to a supported device. All licenses are non-transferable.
More details can be found here.