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On Capitol Hill
The Struggle to Reform Congress and its Consequences, 1948–2000

$39.99 (G)

  • Date Published: February 2006
  • availability: Available
  • format: Paperback
  • isbn: 9780521681278

$ 39.99 (G)
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About the Authors
  • Thirty years after the "Watergate Babies" promised to end corruption in Washington, Julian Zelizer offers the first major history of the demise of the committee-era Congress and the rise of the contemporary legislative branch. Based on research in more than a hundred archival collections, this book tackles one of the most enduring political challenges in America: barring a wholesale revolution, how can we improve our representative democracy so as best to fulfill the promises of the Constitution? Whereas popular accounts suggest that major scandals or legislation can transform government institutions, Zelizer shows that reform is messy, slow, and involves many institutions coming together at the right time. The short period of reform in the 1970s--one that rivaled the Progressive Era--revolved around a coalition that had worked for decades, a slow reconfiguration of the relationship among political institutions, shifts in the national culture, and the ability of reformers to take advantage of scandals and elections. Zelizer presents a new look at the origins of the partisanship and scandal warfare that characterize today's politics. The book also offers a warning to the next generation of reformers by showing how a new political environment can radically transform the political impact of government reforms, as occurred when the conservative movement--during its rise to power in recent decades--took advantage of reforms that had ended the committee era. Julian Zelizer teaches political history at Boston University. His book, Taxing America: Wilbur D. Mills, Congress, and the State, 1945-1975 (Cambridge, 1999), was awarded the Organization of American Historian's 1998 D.B. Hardeman Prize. He is the co-editor of The Democratic Experiment (Princeton University Press, 2003) and the editor of The American Congress: The Building of Democracy (Houghton-Mifflin, 2005).

    • Research based on over 100 archival collections
    • First major history of congresional reform since World War II (written by a historian, rathan than a political scientist)
    • Offers insights into today's political challenges
    Read more

    Reviews & endorsements

    "Zelizer offers a broad yet detailed analysis of the causes and consequences of the five decade evolution that changed Congress from a committee-based institution to the current partisan structure. This book should be read..." R.E. Dewhirst, Northwest Missouri State University, Choice

    "On Capitol Hill deserves to become a landmark in the current revival of the study of American political history. It is a lucidly written, sensible, and wide-ranging survey of Congressional reform in the post World War II era and will provide nourishment for many a stimulating seminar, especially among readers who are eager to enlarge their perspectives beyond the presidential synthesis of American politics." Nelson W. Polsby, University of California, Berkeley, author of How Congress Evolves

    "On Capitol Hill asks a crucial question: why does Congress appear less purposeful and effective than in the past? Julian Zelizer's persuasive answer should engage- and trouble- everyone concerned with the future of American democracy. With its massive research base and its fair-minded, cogent analysis, this book will remain a landmark in the history of American government." Michael B. Katz, Walter H. Annenberg Professor of History, University of Pennsylvania

    "A truly magisterial work, On Capitol Hill situates pivotal shifts in Congressional procedures within the panorama of twentieth-century U.S. history. Analysts of Congress learn how broader social movements and political reorganizations contributed to Congressional reforms of the 1970s, and pushed their consequences in unintended directions. Students of social movements learn why they cannot afford to ignore governing elites and institutional rules of the game. This book deserves a wide and enduring readership within and beyond academia. Bravo, Julian Zelizer, on a landmark achievement!" Theda Skocpol, Victor S. Thomas Professor of Government and Sociology and Director of the Center for American Political Studies, Harvard University

    "With a sure touch, Julian Zelizer offers a comprehensive account of congressional reform during the last half century. It is all here: the Democratic Study Group, Common Cause, various outrages and scandals, the drive for civil rights, the packing of the House Rules Committee in 1961, the liberals' empowerment of the House Speakership, the structural moves by Speaker Newt Gingrich, campaign finance reform. The referencing is prodigious. Nothing like this impressive work has ever been done." David Mayhew, Sterling Professor of Political Science, Yale University

    "Steeped in detailed research and sensitive to the Big Picture, Zelizer tells a gripping story, full of large characters, innovative arguments, and savvy judgments. Zelizer not only analyzes the history of Congressional reform and the political paradigm shifts in Congress, he also reinterprets the history of reform politics in twentieth-century America. Nobody has really explained what happened to the good government, mugwump tradition in American politics after World War II. Zelizer changes all that." Bruce Schulman, Boston University

    "Zelizer's work is an important contribution to the literature on Congress. Besides being informative, it also is a highly entertaining read." Perspectives on Political Science

    "Julian Zelizer's remarkable book offers us nothing less than a hidden history of our times, a parallel universe that explains why Congress was able to enact some of the most APSA Legislative Studies Section Newsletter, and why other equally popular bills were consigned to the dustbin. If the action takes place well within the beltway, Zelizer demonstrates that the impact of procedural reform in the Congress has had enormous consequences all across the land. This book is essential reading, not just for policy historians, but for all those concerned with American labor, race, media, and political culture during the last half of the 20th century." Nelson Lichtenstein, Professor of History, University of California, Santa Barbara

    "All members of the Legislative Studies Section should read this book.... When asked, 'Where can I find a good narrative history of the modern Congress?' we now have an answer." APSA Legislative Studies Section Newsletter

    "Should be required reading in graduate courses on Congress in political science both its methodology and its substance are necessary for future congressional scholars. It easily could be used in undergradute courses, depending on the faculty member's approach to the course. Finally all serious scholars of Congress should have this book on their book shelves. It will quickly become the standard source for those seeking a history of the modern Congress." APSA Perspectives on Politics

    " On Capitol Hill expertly mines archival and published sources to describe efforts to reform Congress during the second half of the twentieth century and relate institutional change to the struggle for political power in the United States. This is not a narrow organizational study of Congress, but a rich historical narrative set in the broad context of social and political developments of the era." - Allan J. Lichtman, American University

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    Product details

    • Date Published: February 2006
    • format: Paperback
    • isbn: 9780521681278
    • length: 376 pages
    • dimensions: 227 x 152 x 22 mm
    • weight: 0.51kg
    • availability: Available
  • Table of Contents

    1. Transforming Congress
    2. The Southern Gettysburg
    3. Bombthrowing liberals
    4. Into the political thicket
    5. Exposing Congress
    6. A window of opportunity
    7. Money in politics
    8. Reforming the future
    9. Watergate babies
    10. Scandal without reform
    11. Congress in the era of cable television
    12. The contemporary era
    13. Epilogue.

  • Author

    Julian E. Zelizer, Boston University
    Julian Zelizer teaches political history at the State University of New York at Albany.

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