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Trucking Country: The Road to America's Wal-Mart Economy
 
 

Trucking Country: The Road to America's Wal-Mart Economy (Hardcover)

by Shane Hamilton (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
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This detailed, closely argued book chronicles the U.S. trucking industry's history, particularly its role in rolling back New Deal policies and regulations. Hamilton is a knowledgeable guide to everything from beef trusts to the National Farmers Organization to the 1979 strike that opens the book, in which 75,000 truckers tried to shut down the nation's highway system. Economy and market buffs looking for a different perspective on America's 20th century economic evolution will find this intriguing and informative. Publishers Weekly With the US again engaged in a debate over the merits of regulation versus the free market, the book's academic research touches on some timely historical issues. It is also a fascinating account of the political battles over the diesel engine and the refrigerated truck, which had emerged as the new technology of the 1920s and 1930s and a threat to the dominance of the railroad distribution system for beef and milk by a few large meat packing companies and local dairies. -- Jonathan Birchall Financial Times Independent trucking is for Hamilton what Kansas was for Frank--the locus that shows a part of what has gone wrong with American politics. -- David Kusnet Bookforum Trucking Country intervenes in [the] crowded debate over the demise of New Deal liberalism from a genuinely original vantage point: the political culture of independent long-haul truckers and the political economy shaped by the agribusiness corporations that they served. -- Matthew Lassiter Democracy Trucking Country offers a finely crafted mix of cultural identity, regional tradition, economic history, legislative politics, political argument and policy transformation. Shane Hamilton uses the history and contemporary development of the trucking industry in the U.S. to reveal the social, economic and political dynamics that were instrumental in shifting the industry away from the heavy regulation of the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) towards deregulation, fragmentation, and free-market competition. -- Michael Foley Times Higher Education If you want to know what really drives the US economy, then this thoroughly researched and well-written book is for you--and that's a big 10-4, Rubber Duck. -- Joe Cushnan The Tribune A brilliant read. Fleet Transportation Magazine [B]y drawing together structural, institutional, economic, and cultural analyses, Hamilton has offered a dense, textured, and complex account of his subject. Trucking Country is essential to any understanding of the decline of the New Deal and the rise of economic conservatism at the end of the twentieth century. -- Joseph E. Lowndes Perspectives on Politics


Review

This detailed, closely argued book chronicles the U.S. trucking industry's history, particularly its role in rolling back New Deal policies and regulations. Hamilton is a knowledgeable guide to everything from beef trusts to the National Farmers Organization to the 1979 strike that opens the book, in which 75,000 truckers tried to shut down the nation's highway system. Economy and market buffs looking for a different perspective on America's 20th century economic evolution will find this intriguing and informative.
(Publishers Weekly )

With the US again engaged in a debate over the merits of regulation versus the free market, the book's academic research touches on some timely historical issues. It is also a fascinating account of the political battles over the diesel engine and the refrigerated truck, which had emerged as the new technology of the 1920s and 1930s and a threat to the dominance of the railroad distribution system for beef and milk by a few large meat packing companies and local dairies.
(Jonathan Birchall Financial Times )

Independent trucking is for Hamilton what Kansas was for Frank--the locus that shows a part of what has gone wrong with American politics.
(David Kusnet Bookforum )

Trucking Country intervenes in [the] crowded debate over the demise of New Deal liberalism from a genuinely original vantage point: the political culture of independent long-haul truckers and the political economy shaped by the agribusiness corporations that they served.
(Matthew Lassiter Democracy )

Trucking Country offers a finely crafted mix of cultural identity, regional tradition, economic history, legislative politics, political argument and policy transformation. Shane Hamilton uses the history and contemporary development of the trucking industry in the U.S. to reveal the social, economic and political dynamics that were instrumental in shifting the industry away from the heavy regulation of the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) towards deregulation, fragmentation, and free-market competition.
(Michael Foley Times Higher Education )

If you want to know what really drives the US economy, then this thoroughly researched and well-written book is for you--and that's a big 10-4, Rubber Duck.
(Joe Cushnan The Tribune )

A brilliant read.
(Fleet Transportation Magazine )

[B]y drawing together structural, institutional, economic, and cultural analyses, Hamilton has offered a dense, textured, and complex account of his subject. Trucking Country is essential to any understanding of the decline of the New Deal and the rise of economic conservatism at the end of the twentieth century.
(Joseph E. Lowndes Perspectives on Politics )

This is a convincing and useful book.
(Peter J. Hugill Journal of American History )

Inside This Book (Learn More)
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Culture of Long-Haul Trucking, Jan 12 2009
By Coach C (Canada) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)   
"Trucking Country" is a social, economic, and cultural history of Long-haul trucking. Shane Hamilton's monograph is a welcome addition to the legacy of New Deal liberalism and the neoliberal shift during the 70s that saw the Reagan era redefine what it meant to be a long-haul trucker.

Hamilton's thesis is that as the emergence of "agribusiness" forced small-town farmers out of their plots, they increasing turned to trucking. From industry's point of view, trucking was the unregulated alternative to breaking the monopolies of the meat-packers, the beef trusts, the milk cartels, and allowed the new middle-class demands for "always low prices" to be institutionalized. Truckers on the other hand, the libertarian anti-statists who resisted the big-boss unions, formed a truly unique identity as a modern-day "American Cowboy" and the cult of personality was born surrounding the myth of the "king of the open road."

Overall, I appreciated very much so the detailed research and wonderful descriptions of rural America. As both an academic text and a casual read, I definitely recommend "Trucking Country" for anyone who wants to learn more about the social history of agrarian USA.
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