
Legislative Foundations of American Consumer Society: Regulation, Deregulation and Their Impacts from the 1930s to Today - Paperback
Legislative Foundations of American Consumer Society: Regulation, Deregulation and Their Impacts from the 1930s to Today - Paperback
$78.91
/

Your payment information is processed securely. We do not store credit card details nor have access to your credit card information.
by Bob Sullivan (Author)
The current literature on consumerism is diverse, scattered, and unsystematic. This book remedies this by identifying the beginning of mass consumer society in the United States, starting with the New Deal. The New Deal framework of guaranteeing new home purchases by means of low down-payment, fixed-rate home mortgages lasted until the 1970s, at which time the legal framework unraveled due to a sustained attack on New Deal racism. Despite this, American consumerism continued and even flourished without a regulatory structure. This book analyzes seven key pieces of federal legislation which undergird American consumer society to this day.
Author Biography
Bob Sullivan is a professor emeritus of the political science faculty of the City University of New York. He has published five books and approximately 25 articles in peer refereed academic journals, and lives in Brooklyn, New York.



















