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(Ebook) Churches and Urban Government in Detroit and New York 1895 1994 1st Edition by Henry J Pratt ISBN 081433668X 9780814336687

  • SKU: EBN-51422548
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Authors:Henry J. Pratt
Pages:210 pages.
Year:2004
Editon:1
Publisher:Wayne State University Press
Language:english
File Size:2.22 MB
Format:pdf
ISBNS:9780814336687, 081433668X
Categories: Ebooks

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(Ebook) Churches and Urban Government in Detroit and New York 1895 1994 1st Edition by Henry J Pratt ISBN 081433668X 9780814336687

(Ebook) Churches and Urban Government in Detroit and New York 1895 1994 1st Edition by Henry J Pratt - Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery: 081433668X, 9780814336687
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ISBN 10: 081433668X 
ISBN 13: 9780814336687
Author: Henry J Pratt

This groundbreaking study analyzes the relationship between the two powerful forces—church organizations and urban politics—within New York City and Detroit during the 19th and 20th centuries. Beginning in the 1890s, the social gospel movement and its secular counterpart, the Progressive movement, set the stage for powerful church and city governance connections. What followed during the next 100 years was the emergence of religious bodies as an important instrument for influencing City Hall on moral and social issues. Churches and Urban Government compares the governing styles of Detroit and New York City from 1895 to 1994 and looks at the steps city-wide religious bodies took to advance the interests of their communities and their local government during this chaotic period in urban history. Detroit and New York City make for a very interesting case study when casting the two cities’ many similarities against their contrasting urban governance styles. What these cities share is a longstanding liberal political culture and comparable ethnic and racial diversity as well as large populations of Catholics and Protestants. Emphasizing the role of Black churches, Henry J. Pratt—with additional material from Ronald Brown—examines how immigration, the Great Depression, and the Civil Rights movement all nurtured this developing link between religion and politics, helping churches evolve into leadership roles within these metropolitan centers.

(Ebook) Churches and Urban Government in Detroit and New York 1895 1994 1st Table of contents:

  1. Introduction
  2. Urban Churches in the Progressive Era
  3. Municipal Government Expansion
  4. Churches Confront the Industrial Age
  5. Formation of the Detroit Council of Churches
  6. Formation of the New York City Church Federation
  7. New York and Detroit Catholicism in the Reform Age
  8. Archdiocesan Caution in a Threatening Atmosphere
  9. Early Evolutionary Changes
  10. Conclusion
  11. Churches, Government, and the Great Depression
  12. The Depression in National Perspective
  13. The Great Depression in New York and Detroit
  14. Catholic Responses to the Great Depression
  15. New York
  16. Brooklyn
  17. Detroit
  18. Protestant Responses
  19. New York
  20. Protestantism’s Social Welfare Impasse
  21. Detroit
  22. Pattern Persistence through Time
  23. Conclusion
  24. Churches, Civil Rights, and the Great Society
  25. Changes in Local Political Scenes
  26. New York
  27. Detroit
  28. Detroit Protestant Churches in the Civil Rights Era
  29. The Civil Rights Era and New York Protestantism
  30. Civil Rights and Threats to PC Internal Cohesion
  31. Civil Rights, the Great Society, and Catholicism
  32. Vatican II, Civil Rights, and Expanded U.S. Programs
  33. Archdiocesan Policies: New York
  34. Archdiocesan Policies: Detroit
  35. New York Protestantism and Appointments to City Offices
  36. Background
  37. Impediments to Influence
  38. Data Requirements
  39. Dilemmas
  40. Differing Approaches
  41. The Civic-Educational Approach
  42. The Moderate-Activist Approach
  43. The Militant-Activist Approach
  44. Growth of Race Consciousness
  45. Drawing a Sharp Line
  46. Some Political Realities
  47. Experience with Moderate Activism
  48. Experience with Militancy
  49. Conclusion
  50. Urban-Related National Developments
  51. The Malaise of Councils of Churches
  52. New York
  53. Detroit
  54. Archdioceses and Inner Cities Transformed
  55. Detroit
  56. Conclusion
  57. The Urban Church in a Conservative Political Era
  58. The Demographic Element
  59. Urban-Related National Developments
  60. The Malaise of Councils of Churches
  61. New York
  62. Detroit
  63. Archdioceses and Inner Cities Transformed
  64. Detroit
  65. Conclusion
  66. The Black Church in a Post-Church Federation Era
  67. Black Nationalism, Black Churches, and Politics in Detroit
  68. Hidden in Plain Sight: Black Nationalism and the Council of Black Baptist Pastors
  69. Rev. Charles Hill, Coleman Young, and the Politics of Self-Determination
  70. Coleman Young’s 1973 Election Campaign
  71. The Black Church and Coleman Young’s Later Years
  72. Council of Black Pastors (CBP) Organization and Structure
  73. New York: Churches and the Black Quest for Political Acceptance
  74. The Jesse Jackson Candidacy
  75. Churches Feel the Effect
  76. Citywide Interfaith Alliance
  77. Conclusion
  78. Conclusion
  79. Disturbances
  80. Regime Differences
  81. Government as Source of Validation and Legitimation
  82. Catholic-Protestant Disparities
  83. Political Appointments Campaigns
  84. Black Ministers’ Conferences
  85. Churches’ Urban Political Influence
  86. Bibliography
  87. Index
  88. Backcover

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