Who Rules America?  By G. William Domhoff, University of California at Santa Cruz

50 Years of Who Rules America

Interviews, Reviews, Retrospects

Bill Domhoff's classic book, Who Rules America?, was first published in 1967. Now in its 8th edition, it has never been out of print.

To celebrate WRA's 50th anniversary, Routledge released a book entitled Studying the Power Elite: Fifty Years of Who Rules America?, featuring essays from Bill and 11 other contemporary sociologists and political scientists.

Excerpts (PDFs)

Interviews

Reviews

Book summary

This book critiques and extends the analysis of power in the classic, Who Rules America?, on the 50th anniversary of its original publication in 1967 — and through its subsequent editions. The chapters, written especially for this book by twelve sociologists and political scientists, provide fresh insights and new findings on many contemporary topics, among them the concerted attempt to privatize public schools; foreign policy and the growing role of the military-industrial component of the power elite; the successes and failures of union challenges to the power elite; the ongoing and increasingly global battles of a major sector of agribusiness; and the surprising details of how those who hold to the egalitarian values of social democracy were able to tip the scales in a bitter conflict within the power elite itself on a crucial banking reform in the aftermath of the Great Recession. These social scientists thereby point the way forward in the study of power, not just in the United States, but globally.

A brief introductory chapter situates Who Rules America? within the context of the most visible theories of power over the past fifty years — pluralism, Marxism, Millsian elite theory, and historical institutionalism. Then, a chapter by G. William Domhoff, the author of Who Rules America?, takes us behind the scenes on how the original version was researched and written, tracing the evolution of the book in terms of new concepts and research discoveries by Domhoff himself, as well as many other power structure researchers, through the 2014 seventh edition.

Readers will find differences of opinion and analysis from chapter to chapter. The authors were encouraged to express their views independently and frankly. They do so in an admirable and useful fashion that will stimulate everyone’s thinking on these difficult and complex issues, setting the agenda for future studies of power.

Essays in Studying the Power Elite

G. William DomhoffWho Rules America? through Seven Editions and Fifty Years: Still More Accurate Than Alternative Power Theories
Robert J. S. RossDomhoff, Mills, and Slow Power
Richard W. Lachmann & Michael SchwartzThe Life and Times of Who Rules America? and the Future of Power Structure Research
John L. CampbellInstitutions, Policy-Planning Networks, and Who Rules America?
Joseph G. PeschekThe Policy-Planning Network, Class Dominance, and the Challenge to Political Science
Beth MintzWho Rules America? and the Policy-Formation Network: The Case of Venture Philanthropy
Ronald W. CoxCorporate Interests And U.S. Foreign Policy
Daniel Schneider & Judith Stepan-NorrisWho Challenges The Power Elite? Labor Factions in 20th-Century America
Kathleen C. SchwartzmanWho Rules The Roost? The Poultry Elite And Their Adversaries
Clarence Y. H. Lo"Fairness" in Presidential Economic Policy: Disagreements among Upper Class Elites


This document's URL: http://whorulesamerica.net/wra50.html?print