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E-raamat: No Little Plans: How Government Built America s Wealth and Infrastructure

(Department of Civic Design, University of Liverpool,)
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Is planning for America anathema to the pursuit of life, liberty and happiness? Is it true, as ideologues like Friedrich Von Hayek, Milton Friedman, and Ayn Rand have claimed, that planning leads to dictatorship, that the state is wholly destructive, and that prosperity is owed entirely to the workings of a free market? To answer these questions Ian Wrays book goes in search of an America shaped by government, plans and bureaucrats, not by businesses, bankers and shareholders. He demonstrates that government plans did not damage American wealth. On the contrary, they built it, and in the most profound ways.

In three parts, the book is an intellectual roller coaster. Part I takes the reader downhill, examining the rise and fall of rational planning, and looks at the converging bands of planning critics, led on the right by the Chicago School of Economics, on the left by the rise of conservation and the counterculture, and two brilliantly iconoclastic writers Jane Jacobs and Rachel Carson.

In Part II, eight case studies take us from the trans-continental railroads through the national parks, the Federal dams and hydropower schemes, the wartime arsenal of democracy, to the postwar interstate highways, planning for New York, the moon shot and the creation of the internet. These are stories of immense government achievement.

Part III looks at what might lie ahead, reflecting on a huge irony: the ideology which underpins the economic and political rise of Asia (by which America now feels so threatened) echoes the pragmatic plans and actions which once secured Americas rise to globalism.

Arvustused

"No Little Plans is a very readable book. Its stories reveal human strengths and weaknesses in delivering big plans. For serious readers, the book contains a lot of insightful and sometimes prescient references. Wray makes clear the need for new missions and goals to inspire government action. This message is aimed at the U.S. but is also pertinent to other Western countries including the UK. I believe that this is a message worth sharing."

John Walls, Journal of Urban Affairs, January 2020

Acknowledgements ix
List of Illustrations and Sources
xi
1 Introduction
1(8)
PART I AMERICAN RETREAT
2 The Crucible of '68
9(21)
The Rise and Fall of Rational Planning in America
3 The Fraying of America
30(21)
The Symptoms, Causes and Consequences of National Fragmentation
PART II AMERICAN ADVANCE
4 The Great and Shining Roads
51(17)
Planning and Building the American Railroads
5 The Worthless Lands
68(18)
Creating the World's First National Parks
6 Deals and Dams
86(18)
Hydroelectric Power and Water for a Continent
7 Engines and Octanes
104(13)
Wartime Plans and the Evolution of the Military Industrial Complex
8 On the Road
117(18)
Engineering the Interstate Highways
9 No Little Plans
135(22)
Power Brokers, Business Elites, and the Making of New York
10 The Moon and the Computer
157(19)
Apollo 11 and the Shaping of the American Economy
11 Frontiers of the Mind
176(17)
How Government Created the Internet
PART III AMERICAN DILEMMA
12 The Road from Serfdom
193(20)
American Missions, Asian Plans, and the Future
Index 213
Ian Wray is Visiting Professor in Civic Design and Heseltine Institute Fellow at the University of Liverpool. He is a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences and Vice Chair of World Heritage UK. He was Chief Planner, Northwest Development Agency, 20002010. He has written for the Architects Journal and Management Today and is the author of Great British Plans: Who Made Them and How They Worked.