Essays

The Dangerous Goodness of Democracy

– Reprinted in Edward C. Banfield, Here the People Rule: Selected Essays (Washington, DC: AEI, 1991).
Abstract: The reason for our inveterate devotion to these millennial ideas is to be found in the nature of our kind of democracy. Ours is the only country in which the public at large participates actively in the daily conduct of government; it is the only… More

Leo Strauss

– In Remembering the University of Chicago: Teachers, Scientists and Scholars, Edward Shils, ed., Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1991, pp. 490-501.

The Illiberal Tocqueville

– In Interpreting Tocqueville's Democracy in America, Ken Masugi, ed., Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 1991, pp. 239-54.

Was the Founding an Accident?

– in Saving the Revolution: The Federalist and the American Founding, Charles R. Kesler, ed., New York: The Free Press, 1987, pp 265-275.

Federalism and the Dilemma of Popular Government

– In How Federal is the Constitution?, Robert A. Goldwin and William Schambra, eds. (Washington: AEI, 1985), pp. 1-15. Reprinted in Edward C. Banfield, Here the People Rule: Selected Essays (Washington, DC: AEI, 1991).
Abstract: Beginning with the Truman administration, there have been persistent and sometimes strenuous efforts to devolve many federal activities to state and local governments. These efforts have almost entirely failed. Meanwhile, the number and variety of… More

The Zoning of Enterprise

Cato Journal, Vol. 2, No. 2, Fall 1982, pp. 339-354. Reprinted in Edward C. Banfield, Here the People Rule: Selected Essays (Washington, DC: AEI, 1991).
Abstract: This chapter seeks to make two principal points. The first is that upward mobility on the part of disadvantaged persons in the cities has been, is being, and doubtlessly will be, hampered by laws and regulations the manifest purpose of which is to… More

Party ‘Reform’ in Retrospect

– In Political Parties in the Eighties, Robert A. Goldwin, ed. (Washington: The AEI Press, 1980), pp. 20-33. Reprinted in Edward C. Banfield, Here the People Rule: Selected Essays (Washington, DC: AEI, 1991).
Abstract: In a paper written almost twenty years ago, I maintained that a political system is an accident, and that to meddle with one that works well is the greatest foolishness of which men are capable. Nevertheless, I said, a democracy will always meddle,… More

Policy Science as Metaphysical Madness

– In Robert C. Goldwin, ed., Statesmanship and Bureaucracy (Washington: American Enterprise Institute, 1977), pp. 1-35. Reprinted in Edward C. Banfield, Here the People Rule: Selected Essays (Washington, DC: AEI, 1991).
Abstract: In the past dozen years or so, policy-oriented social science research and analysis has become a growth industry in the United States. This has occurred in response to demand created by the spate of social welfare programs initiated by the Great… More

Present Orientedness and Crime

– In Assessing the Criminal, R. E. Barnett and J. Hagel, eds., Cambridge: Ballinger, 1977, pp. 133-142. Reprinted in Edward C. Banfield, Here the People Rule: Selected Essays (Washington, DC: AEI, 1991).
Abstract: Since the seventeenth century, political philosophers have maintained that an irrational bias toward present as opposed to future satisfactions is natural to both men and animals and is a principal cause of crime and, more generally, of threats to… More

Corruption as a Feature of Governmental Organization

– in The Journal of Law and Economics, December 1975, Vol. 18, pp. 587-605. Reprinted in Edward C. Banfield, Here the People Rule: Selected Essays (Washington, DC: AEI, 1991).
Excerpt: This is an exploratory paper, the purposes of which are to identify the principal variables having to do with corruption in governmental organizations in the United States and to point out some significant relationships among them. The paper begins… More

The City and the Revolutionary Tradition

– (Washington: American Enterprise Institute, 1974), speech delivered, April 11, 1974. Reprinted in Edward C. Banfield, Here the People Rule: Selected Essays (Washington, DC: AEI, 1991).
Abstract: It would be very pleasant on such an occasion as this to say that the American city has been and is a unique and unqualified success—and to be able to show that its successes all derive from adherence to principles established and given… More

Making a New Federal Program: Model Cities, 1964-68

– In Policy and Politics in America: Six Case Studies, Allan P. Sindler, ed. (Boston: Little, Brown and Co., 1973), pp. 124-158. Reprinted in Edward C. Banfield, Here the People Rule: Selected Essays (Washington, DC: AEI, 1991).
Abstract: During the evening of the first full day of Lyndon B. Johnson’s presidency—at 7:40 P.M. on November 23,1963, to be precise—Walter Heller, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, came to tell him that three days before his assassination… More

A Critical View of the Urban Crisis

– in The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Vol. 405, January 1973, pp. 7-14. Reprinted in Edward C. Banfield, Here the People Rule: Selected Essays (Washington, DC: AEI, 1991).
Abstract: From the farmhouse in Vermont where this is written, it is several miles to the nearest city, the population of which is about ten thousand, but one can find here most of the “big problems” that together are usually thought of as constituting… More

Some Alternatives for the Public Library

– In The Metropolitan Library, Ralph W. Conant and Kathleen Molz, eds., Cambridge: M.I.T. Press, 1972, pp. 89-100. Reprinted in Edward C. Banfield, Here the People Rule: Selected Essays (Washington, DC: AEI, 1991).
Abstract: The public library has more users and more money today than ever before, but it lacks a purpose. It is trying to do some things that it probably cannot do, and it is doing others that it probably should not do. At the same time, it is neglecting… More

How Many, and Who, Should Be Set At Liberty?

– In Civil Disorder and Violence: Essays on Causes and Cures, Harry M. Clor, ed., Chicago: Rand McNally & Co., 1972, pp. 27-45. Reprinted in Edward C. Banfield, Here the People Rule: Selected Essays (Washington, DC: AEI, 1991).
Abstract: It is now widely held, one might almost say officially held, that not only robberies, murders, and rapes but civil disorder in general arise from society’s neglect of and injustice toward the poor and the black. The Kerner Commission Report… More

Revenue Sharing in Theory and Practice

The Public Interest, No. 23, Spring 1971, pp. 33-45. Reprinted in Edward C. Banfield, Here the People Rule: Selected Essays (Washington, DC: AEI, 1991).
Abstract: How one evaluates revenue sharing will depend upon what one takes the central issues to be. Oddly enough, what must appear to many people to be the issue—namely, how to keep the cities and states from going bankrupt—is not properly speaking an… More

Model Cities: A Step Towards the New Federalism

The Report of the President’s Task Force on Model Cities, U.S. Government Printing Office, August 1970.
Edward C. Banfield chaired this task force, which included James Q. Wilson (a former student of his), Richard Lugar (then Mayor of Indianapolis), Professor James Buchanan, and others. Excerpt: Although federal support of the cities has increased sharply in… More

Power Structure and Civic Leadership

– (with James Q. Wilson), Strategies of Community Organization, Fred M. Cox and others, eds., Itasca, IL: F. E. Peacock Publishers, 1970, pp. 112-122.

Businessmen in Politics

– (with James Q. Wilson), Democracy in Urban America, revised edition, Oliver P. Williams, ed., Chicago: Rand McNally, 1969, pp. 366-379.

An Act of Corporate Citizenship

– In Programs to Employ the Disadvantaged, Peter B. Doeringer, ed., Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1969, pp. 26-59.

Rioting Mainly for Fun and Profit

– In The Metropolitan Enigma: Inquiries into the Nature and Dimensions of America’s “Urban Crisis,” James Q. Wilson, ed., Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1968, pp. 283-308.

Economic Analysis of Political Problems

– Reprinted in Edward C. Banfield, Here the People Rule: Selected Essays (Washington, DC: AEI, 1991).
Abstract: My main contentions are (1) social choice processes differ in their logical structures; economics deals with one category (“aggregation”), political science with another (“politics”); (2) aggregation processes are analyzable in terms of a… More

Cleavages in Urban Politics

– (with James Q. Wilson), in Politics in the Metropolis: A Reader in Conflict and Cooperation, Thomas R. Dye and Brett W. Hawkins, eds., Columbus, Ohio: Charles E. Merrill, 1967, pp. 43-55.

Book review of The City is the Frontier, by Charles Abrams

Commentary, Vol. 41, No. 3, March 1966, pp. 93-95.
Excerpt: In 1960 the Ford Foundation made grants of $25,000 each to ten authorities on housing and planning, in order to induce them to set down their thoughts on urban renewal. One of the ten was Charles Abrams, a former chairman of the New York State Rent… More

The Negro in City Politics

– (with James Q. Wilson), in Problems and Prospects of the Negro Movement, Raymond J. Murphy and Howard Elinson, eds., Belmont, CA: Wadsworth, 1966, pp. 376-394.

Needed: A Public Purpose

– In The Public Library and the City, Ralph W. Conant, ed., Cambridge: M.I.T. Press, 1965, pp. 102-113.

Government in Metropolis

– In New City, Man in Metropolis: A Christian Response, Chicago: Catholic Council on Working Life, Vol. 2, No. 2, April 15, 1963, pp. 7-9.

In Defense of the American Party System

– In Political Parties, U.S.A., Robert A. Goldwin, ed. (Chicago: Rand McNally & Co., 1961), pp. 21-39. Reprinted in Edward C. Banfield, Here the People Rule: Selected Essays (Washington, DC: AEI, 1991).
Abstract: The American party system has been criticized on four main grounds: (1) the parties do not offer the electorate a choice in terms of fundamental principles; their platforms are very similar and mean next to nothing; (2)they cannot discipline those… More

The Political Implications of Metropolitan Growth

Daedalus, Vol. 90, Winter, 1960, pp. 61-78. Reprinted in Edward C. Banfield, Here the People Rule: Selected Essays (Washington, DC: AEI, 1991).
Abstract: The rapid growth of the metropolitan populations will not necessarily have much political effect. To be sure, many new facilities, especially schools, highways, and water supply and sewage disposal systems, will have to be built and much private… More

The Training of the Executive

Public Policy, Vol. 10, 1960, Carl J. Friedrich and Seymour E. Harris, eds., pp. 16-43. Reprinted in Edward C. Banfield, Here the People Rule: Selected Essays (Washington, DC: AEI, 1991).
Abstract: The postwar popularity of executive development programs raises in slightly new form the old question of what should be the training of the executive. An executive development program is a conference, course, or seminar lasting from one or two days… More

Ends and Means in Planning

International Social Science Journal, Vol. 11, No. 3, 1959, pp. 361-368. Reprinted in Edward C. Banfield, Here the People Rule: Selected Essays (Washington, DC: AEI, 1991).
Abstract: The word planning is given a bewildering variety of meanings. To some it means socialism. To others, the layout and design of cities. To still others, regional development schemes like TVA, measures to control the business cycle, or “scientific… More

The Case of the Blighted City

– A pamphlet in the Case Stories in American Politics Series, Robert A. Goldwin, ed., Chicago: American Foundation for Continuing Education, 1959.

The Case of the Growing Problem

– A pamphlet in the Case Stories in American Politics Series, Robert A. Goldwin, ed., Chicago: American Foundation for Continuing Education, 1959.

The Case of the Handcuffed Sheriff

– A pamphlet in the Case Stories in American Politics Series, Robert A. Goldwin, ed., Chicago: American Foundation for Political Education, 1957.