Chapter
Publicly Available
List of Tables
-
Daniel Carpenter
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- List of Illustrations ix
- List of Tables xi
- Acknowledgments xiii
- Abbreviations xv
- Introduction 1
- One. Entrepreneurship, Networked Legitimacy, and Autonomy 14
- Two. The Clerical State: Obstacles to Bureaucratic Autonomy in Nineteenth-Century America 37
- Three. The Railway Mail, Comstockery, and the Waning of the Old Postal Regime, 1862–94 65
- Four. Organizational Renewal and Policy Innovation in the National Postal System, 1890–1910 94
- Five. The Triumph of the Moral Economy: Finance, Parcels, and the Labor Dilemma in the Post Office, 1908–24 144
- Six. Science in the Service of Seeds: The USDA, 1862–1900 179
- Seven. From Seeds to Science: The USDA as University, 1897–1917 212
- Eight. Multiple Networks and the Autonomy of Bureaus: Departures in Food, Pharmaceutical, and Forestry Policy, 1897–1913 255
- Nine. Brokerage and Bureaucratic Policymaking: The Cementing of Autonomy at the USDA, 1914–28 290
- Ten. Structure, Reputation, and the Bureaucratic Failure of Reclamation Policy, 1902–14 326
- Conclusion: The Politics of Bureaucratic Autonomy 353
- Notes 369
- Archival Sources 459
- Index 465
- PRINCETON STUDIES IN AMERICAN POLITICS 481
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- List of Illustrations ix
- List of Tables xi
- Acknowledgments xiii
- Abbreviations xv
- Introduction 1
- One. Entrepreneurship, Networked Legitimacy, and Autonomy 14
- Two. The Clerical State: Obstacles to Bureaucratic Autonomy in Nineteenth-Century America 37
- Three. The Railway Mail, Comstockery, and the Waning of the Old Postal Regime, 1862–94 65
- Four. Organizational Renewal and Policy Innovation in the National Postal System, 1890–1910 94
- Five. The Triumph of the Moral Economy: Finance, Parcels, and the Labor Dilemma in the Post Office, 1908–24 144
- Six. Science in the Service of Seeds: The USDA, 1862–1900 179
- Seven. From Seeds to Science: The USDA as University, 1897–1917 212
- Eight. Multiple Networks and the Autonomy of Bureaus: Departures in Food, Pharmaceutical, and Forestry Policy, 1897–1913 255
- Nine. Brokerage and Bureaucratic Policymaking: The Cementing of Autonomy at the USDA, 1914–28 290
- Ten. Structure, Reputation, and the Bureaucratic Failure of Reclamation Policy, 1902–14 326
- Conclusion: The Politics of Bureaucratic Autonomy 353
- Notes 369
- Archival Sources 459
- Index 465
- PRINCETON STUDIES IN AMERICAN POLITICS 481