8th Edition

Who's Running America? The Obama Reign

By Thomas R. Dye Copyright 2014
    248 Pages
    by Routledge

    248 Pages
    by Routledge

    A classic of American government, Who's Running America? continues to demonstrate how power is concentrated in large institutions no matter who inhabits the White House. The eighth edition of this best-selling text focuses on the Obama administration and the ways in which it is different from but also similar to administrations that have come before. Based on years of exhaustive data compilation and analysis, Who's Running America? explores the influence and impact of governmental leaders, corporate officials, and other elites both inside and outside the United States. Employing an oligarchic model of national policymaking, Tom Dye doesn't just lay out theory and data. He very consciously "names names" in describing the people who inhabit the White House, the Cabinet, the leaders of Congress, members of the Supreme Court, as well as the board rooms of the nation's largest corporations and banks including leading media lights as well as "fat cat" political contributors. Dye argues that big institutions run America, but also that these institutions are made up of real people. Who's Running America? puts the flesh and bones on the statistics and delivers the inside scoop on the Obama reign.

    Chapter 1 Elitism in a Democracy Chapter 2 The Corporate Directors Chapter 3 The Money Elite Chapter 4 The Media Moguls Chapter 5 The Governing Circles Chapter 6 The Civic Establishment Chapter 7 How Institutional Elites Make Public Policy Chapter 8 The Structure of Institutional Power Chapter 9 Institutional Elites in America

    Biography

    Authored by Dye, Thomas R.

    “Almost all introductory textbooks either ignore or only superficially mention the vast concentrations of private power, institutions, and decision-making in America and their consequences for meaningful democracy. For more than two decades, Who’s Running America? has filled this enormous gap. Thoughtfully and methodically, Dye analyzes the role of major institutions in decision-making and in constraining democracy. Well-illustrated with examples, Dye presents an up-to-date analysis that Hamilton and the Madison of Federalist 10 would find agreeable.”
    —David Johns, Portland State University, author of A New Conservation Politics