"Gail Radford has performed a real service here, deftly situating the first comprehensive history of this sprawling but underappreciated aspect of American governance within broader narratives of modern US history. As she explores the histories of agencies like the Federal Farm Land Bank and the Buffalo Sewer Authority, Radford's prose absolutely crackles--this is a real page-turner!"--Derek Hoff "coauthor of Fighting Foreclosure: The Blaisdell Case, The Contract Clause, and the Great Depression"
"Gail Radford is an imaginative student of American statecraft whose probing narrtaive has put an otherwise prosaic set of agencies and institutions close to the center of our understanding of statebuilding. By explaining how quasi-governmental state authorities became such a pervasive part of the way virtually every level of government finances its activities, Radford unlocks a puzzle: how so many Americans can both distrust their state and also insist upon an ever-expanding set of governmental services. This is an important and provocative book."
--Nelson Lichtenstein "author of State of the Union: A Century of American Labor"
"In a lucid, concise, and compelling synthesis, The Rise of the Public Authority brings a historical sensibility to the evolution of extramural state building in the twentieth century. . . . It convincingly conveys the need for deep historical analysis rather than overarching theory to understand the growth of the American state."-- "American Historical Review"
"This is rich and largely unfamiliar material, and Radford's book is indispensable reading for any who seek to understand the whys and wherefores of American state-building in its formative years."-- "Perspectives on Politics"
"At a time when many Americans express a deep frustration with government in the United States, Gail Radford provides a crucial new perspective on how the American state actually works--and into how that state was built. Rise of the Public Authority breaks down conventional categories of American political development by tracing a critical form of state capacity that operates across federal and subfederal levels of government and, more often than not, out of the public eye. Gail Radford makes this rarely recognized and even less understood capacity vitally clear."--Guian A. McKee "author of The Problem of Jobs: Liberalism, Race, and Deindustrialization in Philadelphia"