Glossary of Terms
- Agribusiness:
Farming on a large scale, using the production, processing, and
distribution methods of modern business.
Farming became a big business, not just a way to feed a family and
make a living, in the late nineteenth century as farms got larger and more
mechanized. In the 1940s and 1950s,
specialized commercial farms replaced many family-run operations and grew
to an enormous scale.
- Alliance System:
The military and diplomatic system formulated in an effort to create a
balance of power in pre-World War I Europe. Nations were bound together by rigid and
comprehensive treaties that promised mutual aid in the case of attack by
specific other nations. The system
swung into action after the Austrian archduke Franz Ferdinand was assassinated
in Sarajevo on June 28, 1914, dragging most of Europe into war.
- Anarchist: A person who rebels
against established order and authority.
An anarchist is someone who believes that government of any kind is
unnecessary and undesirable and should be replaced with voluntary
cooperation and free association.
Anarchists became increasingly visible in the United States in the
late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. They advocated revolution and grew in
numbers through appeals to discontented laborers. Anarchists frequently employed violence
in an attempt to achieve their goals.
In 1901, anarchist Leon Czolgosz assassinated President William
McKinley.
- Black Nationalism: A term linked to several African American movements
emphasizing racial pride, separation from whites and white institutions,
and black autonomy. Black
Nationalism gained in popularity with the rise of Marcus Garvey and the
Universal Negro Improvement Association (1917-1927) and later with the
Black Panther Party, Malcolm X, and other participants of the black power
movements of the 1960s.
- Civil Service:
The administrative service of a government. This term often applies to reforms
following passage of the Pendleton Act in 1883, which set qualifications
for U.S. government jobs and sought to remove such jobs from political
influence.
- Closed Shop:
An establishment in which every employee is required to join a union.
- Colonization: The process by which a country or
society gains control over another, primarily though settlement.
- Communism (Communist Party): A system of government and political organization
based on Marxist-Leninist ideals, in which a single authoritarian party
controls the economy through state ownership of production in order to
reach the final stage of Marxist theory, in which the state dissolves and
economic goods are disturbed evenly for the common good. Communists around
the globe encouraged the spread of communism in other nations in hopes of
fomenting a worldwide revolution.
At its peak in the 1930s, the Communist Party of the United States
worked closely with labor unions and insisted that only the overthrow of
the capitalist system by its workers could save the victims of the Great
Depression. After World War II, the
Communist power and aspirations of the Soviet Union were considered to be
a direct threat to American democracy.
- Democracy: A system of
government in which the people have the power to rule, either directly or
indirectly through their elected representatives.
- Fascism: an authoritarian system of government characterized by
dictatorial rule, disdain for international stability, and a conviction
that warfare is the only means by which a nation can attain
greatness. Nazi Germany and
Mussolini’s Italy are the prime examples of fascism
- Feminism: The belief that men
and women have inherent (inborn) right to equal social, political, and
economic opportunities. The
suffrage movement (1890s – 192) and
second-wave feminism of the 1960s and 1970s were the most visible and
successful manifestations of feminism, but feminist ideas were expressed
in a variety of statements and movements as early as the late 18th
century and continue to be expressed in the 21st century.
- Gospel of Wealth:
the idea that wealth garnered from earthly success should be used for good
works. Andrew Carnegie promoted
this view in an 1889 essay in which he maintained that the wealthy should
serve as stewards and act in the best interests of society as a whole.
- Keynesian
economics: A theory developed by economist John Maynard Keynes
that guided US economic policy from the New Deal to the 1970s. According to Keynesians, the federal
government has the duty to stimulate and manage the economy by spending
money on public works projects and by making general tax cuts in order to
put more money into the hands of ordinary people, thus creating demand.
- Laissez – faire:
The doctrine, based on economic theory, that government should not
interfere in business or the economy.
Laissez-faire ideas guided American government policy in the late
19th century and conservative politics in the 20th
century. Business interests that
supported laissez-faire in the late 19th century accepted
government interference when it took the form of tariffs or subsides that
worked to their benefit. In recent
history, business interests that support laissez-faire accept government
interference when it takes the form of favorable tax laws that benefit
large corporations. Broader uses of the term refer to the simple
philosophy of abstaining from interference.
- Liberalism: The political
doctrine that government rests on the consent of the governed and is
duty-bound to protect the freedom and property of the individual. In the
20th century, liberalism became associated with the idea that
government should regulate the economy and ensure the material well-being
and individual rights of all people.
See progressivism and social justice.
- Monopoly: Exclusive control and
domination by a single business entity over an entire industry through
ownership, command of supply, or other means. Gilded Age businesses monopolized their
industries quite profitably, often organizing holding companies and trusts
to do so.
- Nationalism:
A strong feeling of devotion and loyalty toward one nation over
others. Nationalism encourages the
promotion of the nation’s common culture, language, and customs.
- Nativism: Bias against
immigrants and in favor of native-born inhabitants. American nativists especially favor
persons who come from white, Anglo-Saxon, Protestant lines over those from
other racial, ethnic and religious heritages. Nativists may include former immigrants
who view new immigrants as incapable of assimilation. Many nativists, such as members of the
Know-Nothing Party in the 19th century and the Ku Klux Klan
through the contemporary period, voice anti-immigrant, anti-Catholic, and
anti-Semitic sentiments.
- New Deal: The group of social and economic programs that President Franklin
Roosevelt developed to provide relief for the needy, speed economic
recovery, and reform economic and government institutions. The New Deal
was a massive effort to bring the United States out of the Great
Depression and ensure its future prosperity.
- Oligopoly: A competitive system
in which several large corporations dominate an industry by dividing the
market so each business has a share of it.
More prevalent than outright monopolies during the late 1800s, the
oligopolies of the Gilded Age successfully muted competition and benefited
the corporations that participated in this type of arrangement.
- Progressivism, (progressive movement): A wide-ranged 20th century reform
movement that advocated government activism to mitigate the problems
created by urban industrialization. Most specifically, the movement called
for government Progressivism reached its peak in 1912 with the creation of
the Progressive Party, which ran Theodore Roosevelt for president. The
term progressivism has come to mean any general advocating of social
welfare programs. In the United
States, the Progressive Era was a period of reform which spanned from the
1890s to 1920. In that time
progressives strongly opposed waste and corruption, seeking change in
regard to workers’ rights and protection of the ordinary citizen in
general. The reformers (and their
opponents) were predominantly members of the middle class. Most were well educated white
Protestants who lived in cities. Catholics, Jews and blacks crafted their
own versions of the Progressive Movement. In general, progressives in
pushed for social justice, general equality and public safety. Progressivism
is still very much part of the dialogue of social reform and
politics. For example, the belief
by many politicians and citizens that the United States should have a
national health care plan is an example of Progressivism.
- Radicalism: An approach to reform
that demands a revolutionary change in the basic institutions of politics,
economics, and society.
- Reform Darwinism: a social theory,
based on Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution that emphasized activism,
arguing that humans could speed up evolution by altering the environment
(conditions of housing, work, education in society). A challenge to social
Darwinism, reform Darwinism condemned laissez-faire and demanded that the
government take a more active approach to solving social problems. It became the ideological basis for
progressive reform in the late 19th and early 20th
centuries.
- Scientific management: A system of organizing work developed by Frederick
Winslow Taylor in the late 19th century to increase the
efficiency and productivity by breaking tasks into their component parts
and training workers to perform specific parts. Labor resisted this effort because it
deskilled workers and led to the speedup of production lines. Taylor’s ideas were most popular at the
height of the Progressive Era.
- Separate Spheres: A concept of gender relations that
developed in the Jacksonian era (1830s) and continued well into the 20th
century. The concept holds that
women’s proper place was in the private world of hearth and home (the
private sphere) and men’s was in the public world of commerce and politics
(the public sphere). The doctrine of separate spheres ended slowly over
the 19th and 20th centuries as women became more and
more involved in public activities.
- Spoils System:
an arrangement in which party leaders reward party loyalists with
government jobs. This slang term
for patronage comes from the phrase “to the victor go the spoils.” Widespread government corruption during
the Gilded Age spurred reformers to curb the spoils system through the
passage of the Pendleton Act in 1883, which created the Civil Service
Commission to award government jobs on the basis of merit.
- Social Justice: Based on the assumption that in a
democratic society the basic needs of food, shelter, jobs, and education
should be available to all citizens.
If these conditions are not met in a free market economy, then it
is the responsibility of the political process (government) to make these
needs accessible to citizens. Underlying this concept is a belief that the
assumption that the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few. See
Progressivism.
- Social Darwinism: A social theory based
on Charles Darwin’s’ theory of evolution that argues that all progress in
human society comes as the result of competition and natural
selection. Gilded Age (1880s –
1890s) proponents such as William Graham Sumner and Herbert Spencer
claimed that reform was useless because the rich and poor were precisely
where nature intend them to be and intervention would retard the progress
of humanity.
- Social
gospel movement: A religious movement in the late 19th and
early 20th centuries founded on the idea that Christians have a
responsibility to reform society as well as individuals. Social gospel adherents (advocates)
encouraged people to put Christ’s teachings to work in their daily lives
by actively promoting social justice.
30. Social Welfare State: A nation or state in which the
government assumes responsibility for some or all of the individual and social
welfare of its citizens. Welfare states
commonly provide education, health care, food programs for the poor,
unemployment competition, and other social benefits. The United States
dramatically expanded its role as a welfare state with the provisions of the
New Deal in the 1930s.
- Socialism: A government system in which the state owns and operates the
largest and most important parts of the economy.
- Suffrage: The right to vote. The term suffrage is most often associated
with the efforts of American women to secure voting rights in the late 19th
and early 20th century. These efforts met with success with the
ratification of the 19th amendment to the U. S. Constitution in
1920.
- Temperance
Movement: The reform movement to end drunkenness
by urging people to abstain from the consumption of alcohol. Begun in the 1820s, this movement
achieved its greatest political victory with the passage of a
constitutional amendment in 1919 that prohibited the manufacture, sale,
and transportation of alcohol. That
amendment was repealed in 1933.
- Vertical
Integration: A
system in which a single person or corporation controls all processes of
an industry from start to finished product. Andrew Carnegie first used vertical
integration in the 1870s, controlling every aspect of steel production
from the mining of iron ore to the manufacturing of the final product,
thereby maximizing profits by eliminating the use of outside suppliers or
services.
35. Welfare Capitalism: The idea that a capitalistic,
industrial society can operate benevolently to improve the lives of workers.
The notion of welfare capitalism became popular in the 1920s as industries
extend the benefits of scientific management to improve safety and sanitation
in the workplace as well as institute paid vacations and pension plans.