Herbert Hoover, Unemployment, and the Public Sphere examines the fulfillment of Hoover's ideas in the area of unemployment between 1919 and 1933. The economic system Herbert Hoover envisioned, one based on cooperation and individual initiative with limited government, and the language he used to promote this system defined New Era discourse. His American Individualism, printed in 1923, served as the political philosophy of the administrations of the 1920s. In his discourse from 1919-1921, Hoover expanded the criteria- the conceptual definitions of virtue and liberty. The book includes a foreword by Mary O. Furner.
Vincent Gaddis is Associate Professor of American History at Benedictine University. Professor Gaddis holds a Ph.D. in United States Public Policy History from Northern Illinois University.
Chapter 1 ForewordChapter 2 AcknowledgementsChapter 3 Herbert Hoover, Unemployment, and the Public Sphere: A Conceptual History, 1919-1933Chapter 4 Herbert Hoover and the Unemployment Conference of 1921Chapter 5 Herbert Hoover and Political Economy, 1919-1925: An OverviewChapter 6 A Challenge to Voluntarism: Hoover and Coal, 1921-1927Chapter 7 Voluntarism and Municipal Government: Chicago, 1921-1927Chapter 8 Unemployment Relief Strategies in Milwaukee, 1921-1925Chapter 9 Detroit, Automobiles, and the Unemployment Crisis of 1921Chapter 10 Herbert Hoover, the Great Depression, and the Widening of VoluntarismChapter 11 Municipal Government and Voluntarism: Chicago, Milwaukee, and Detroit-The Great DepressionChapter 12 Conclusion: Herbert Hoover and the Public SphereChapter 13 BibliographyChapter 14 Index
Gaddis draws on research in personal manuscript collections, municpial records, local and state historical societies, printed autobiographies and biographies, and city newspapers to fill in the picture of how Hooverian response to the immediate crisis of unemployment in 1921 played out on the local level.