This book provides a very broad and representative selection of the scholarly literature found in learned journals on the subject of government-business relations in the age of industry, the period since 1870. It covers all the arenas of business-government interaction.
1. From Peckham to White: Economic Welfare and the Rule of Reason
2. The
Taft Administration and the Sherman Antitrust Act
3. Great Expectations: The
Search for Order in Bituminous Coal, 18901917
4. Herbert Croly, Progressive
Ideology, and the FTC Act
5. Theodore Roosevelt and the Bureau of
Corporations
6. Potential Competition and the American Antitrust Legislation
of 1914
7. The Discovery that Business Corrupts Politics: A Reappraisal of
the Origins of Progressivism
8. Losing to Win: U.S. Steels Pricing,
Investment Decisions, and Market Share, 190 11938
9. Missouri and the Beef
Trust: Consumer Action and Investigation, 1902
10. The Petroleum Industry in
Transition: Antitrust and the Decline of Monopoly Control in Oil
11. The
Politics of Bureaucratization and the U.S. Bureau of Corporations
12. Woodrow
Wilson as Corporate Liberal: Toward a Reconsideration of Left Revisionist
Historiography
13. Woodrow Wilson and the Political Economy of Modern United
States Liberalism
14. Louis D. Brandeis, the New Freedom and the State
15.
Business Disunity and the Progressive Movement, 19011914
16. Cottonseed
Price-Fixing in Eastern North Carolina, 19031907
Robert F. Himmelberg