Will the South Rise Again? Monochromatic Politics and Political Clout in the Modern South
In this paper I make the argument that the South runs the very real risk of becoming irrelevant to American national politics, the consequences of which can be devastating to what is one of the poorest regions in the country. Some of our most vulnerable citizens live in the South, in what are low ta...
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doaj-7ca4aa626eb1497c98643388b1bf225c2020-11-24T21:36:31ZengGöttingen University PressAmerican Studies Journal 1433-52392012-01-01563Will the South Rise Again? Monochromatic Politics and Political Clout in the Modern SouthDaniel P. FranklinIn this paper I make the argument that the South runs the very real risk of becoming irrelevant to American national politics, the consequences of which can be devastating to what is one of the poorest regions in the country. Some of our most vulnerable citizens live in the South, in what are low tax, low service states. Without the intervention of the Federal government, the South runs the risk of becoming a country within a country, a third world state with dramatic disparities in the standard of living for the rich and the poor, nonexistent consumer protection, a crumbling infrastructure, and inadequate public schools and health care.http://www.asjournal.org/archive/56/207.htmlBarack ObamaUnited StatesAmericaSouthpoliticspresidencycensusstatesgovernmenttaxesinfrastructure |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Daniel P. Franklin |
spellingShingle |
Daniel P. Franklin Will the South Rise Again? Monochromatic Politics and Political Clout in the Modern South American Studies Journal Barack Obama United States America South politics presidency census states government taxes infrastructure |
author_facet |
Daniel P. Franklin |
author_sort |
Daniel P. Franklin |
title |
Will the South Rise Again? Monochromatic Politics and Political Clout in the Modern South |
title_short |
Will the South Rise Again? Monochromatic Politics and Political Clout in the Modern South |
title_full |
Will the South Rise Again? Monochromatic Politics and Political Clout in the Modern South |
title_fullStr |
Will the South Rise Again? Monochromatic Politics and Political Clout in the Modern South |
title_full_unstemmed |
Will the South Rise Again? Monochromatic Politics and Political Clout in the Modern South |
title_sort |
will the south rise again? monochromatic politics and political clout in the modern south |
publisher |
Göttingen University Press |
series |
American Studies Journal |
issn |
1433-5239 |
publishDate |
2012-01-01 |
description |
In this paper I make the argument that the South runs the very real risk of becoming irrelevant to American national politics, the consequences of which can be devastating to what is one of the poorest regions in the country. Some of our most vulnerable citizens live in the South, in what are low tax, low service states. Without the intervention of the Federal government, the South runs the risk of becoming a country within a country, a third world state with dramatic disparities in the standard of living for the rich and the poor, nonexistent consumer protection, a crumbling infrastructure, and inadequate public schools and health care. |
topic |
Barack Obama United States America South politics presidency census states government taxes infrastructure |
url |
http://www.asjournal.org/archive/56/207.html |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT danielpfranklin willthesouthriseagainmonochromaticpoliticsandpoliticalcloutinthemodernsouth |
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