Charter reform in Chicago

Bibliographic Information

Charter reform in Chicago

Maureen A. Flanagan

Southern Illinois University Press, c1987

Available at  / 3 libraries

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Note

Revision of the author's thesis (Ph. D.)--Loyola University, 1981

Bibliography: p. 189-198

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

A fresh look at the question of why charter reform failed in Chicago when it succeeded in other large cities across the country.Political scientists have tried to understand the failure of Chicago s charter reform movement through simplistic paradigms developed in studies of other cities. Flanagan, however, argues that Chicago, like all cities, has its own political culture, the result of forces and circumstances unique to the area.Many factors joined to doom the charterbut most important, Flanagan suggests, was the preponderance of upper-class, pro-business delegates on the Chicago New Charter Convention. Under their leadership, the convention produced a charter that ignored the concerns of many of the city s voters. Its defeat left the city an unwieldy mixture of localized taxing entities, virtually mandating the development of the Machine."

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