- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
PLAC: Political Lessons from American Cities
About This Book
Reforming Philadelphia examines the cyclical efforts of insurgents to change the city's government over nearly 350 years. Political scientist Richardson Dilworth tracks reformers as they create a new purpose for the city or reshape the government to reflect emerging ideas. Some wish to thwart the "corrupt machine, " while others seek to gain control of the government via elections. These actors formed coalitions and organizations that disrupted the status quo in the hope of transforming the city (and perhaps also enriching themselves).
Dilworth addresses Philadelphia's early development through the present day, including momentous changes from its new city charter in 1885 and the Republican machine that emerged around the same time to its transformation to a Democratic stronghold in the 1950s, when the city also experienced a racial transition. Focusing primarily on the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, Dilworth evaluates the terms of Mayors Frank Rizzo, Wilson Goode, and Ed Rendell, as well as John Street, Michael Nutter, and Jim Kenney to illustrate how power and resistance function, and how Philadelphia's political history and reform cycles offer a conceptual model that can easily be applied to other cities.
Reforming Philadelphia provides a new framework for understanding the evolving relationship between national politics and local, city politics.
Frequently asked questions
Information
Table of contents
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Reform Cycles and Urban Political Development
- 1. Constructing the Context for Reform
- 2. Reforming Twentieth-Century Philadelphia
- 3. Past and Present Progressive Eras and the Future of Philadelphia Politics
- Conclusion: Philadelphia Politics and the Passage of Time
- Notes
- Index