The Road to Inequality: How the Federal Highway Program Polarized America and Undermined Cities

by Clayton Nall

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The Road to Inequality shows how policies that shape geographic space change our politics, focusing on the effects of the largest public works project in American history: the federal highway system. For decades, federally subsidized highways have selectively facilitated migration into fast-growing suburbs, producing an increasingly non-urban Republican electorate. This book examines the highway programs' policy origins at the national level and traces how these intersected with local show more politics and interests to facilitate complex, mutually-reinforcing processes that have shaped America's growing urban-suburban divide and, with it, the politics of metropolitan public investment. As Americans have become more polarized on urban-suburban lines, attitudes towards transportation policy - a once quintessentially 'local' and non-partisan policy area - are now themselves driven by partisanship, endangering investments in metropolitan programs that provide access to opportunity for millions of Americans. show less

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Genres
Nonfiction, Politics and Government, Sociology
DDC/MDS
303.48Society, government, & cultureSocial sciences, sociology & anthropologySocial processesSocial changeCauses of change
LCC
HE203 .N25Social sciencesTransportation and communicationsTransportation and communications
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Members
15
Popularity
1,597,067
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
4