A Commercial Republic: America's Enduring Debate over Democratic Capitalism. By Mike O’Connor. (Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas, 2014. Pp. xii, 287. $34.95.)

Historian ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 78 (4) ◽  
pp. 769-770
Author(s):  
John Lauritz Larson
2018 ◽  
pp. 25-34
Author(s):  
Edward J. Martin ◽  
Rodolfo D. Torres ◽  
Mateo S. Pimentel

2021 ◽  
pp. 269-283
Author(s):  
Dirk Helbing

Author(s):  
David Pearson

As the United States emerged triumphant from the Cold War and became the world’s sole superpower, the 1990s underground punk renaissance challenged the narrative that democratic capitalism was the best possible world. It did so by transforming punk musical style, politics, and culture to speak to new conditions and revolutionize the punk scene from the inside out. An outline of punk’s history and musical development, as well as an exposition of original methods of musical analysis for punk rhythms, riffs, timbres, and vocals, provide the necessary background for understanding 1990s punk.


Author(s):  
Lane Kenworthy

Abstract: The experience of the affluent democratic nations over the past half century hasn’t been kind to the hypothesis that a small-government approach can do as well as social democratic capitalism. Countries with smaller government haven’t achieved faster economic growth. Families and voluntary organizations sometimes are less effective and efficient than government programs, they by nature aren’t comprehensive in coverage, they’ve been weakening over time, and they are nearly or equally as prominent in nations with a big government as in those with a smaller one. Private provision of services should be welcomed, even embraced, but it is most effective as a complement to public provision rather than a substitute. Relying on heavily targeted government transfers may be politically sustainable only in a country with a strong egalitarian ethos, such as Australia, and even there it hasn’t matched the success of social democratic capitalism.


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