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Highway Heist: America's Crumbling Infrastructure and the Road Forward

Highway Heist: America's Crumbling Infrastructure and the Road Forward

Current price: $26.95
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Highway Heist: America's Crumbling Infrastructure and the Road Forward

Barnes and Noble

Highway Heist: America's Crumbling Infrastructure and the Road Forward

Current price: $26.95
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Size: Hardcover

CartBuy Online
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In this eye-opening book, Professor James Bennett guides readers through centuries of one of the most underrated yet widely used aspects of American life—roads.
Relying on history and economic data—and with a humorous and oftentimes sharp tongue—Bennett explains how important America’s highways and byways have been to everything from policymaking to everyday life.
Crafting America’s
roads
took persuasion, planning—and more taxes than any politician could have dreamed of. And far too often their realization, thanks, in Bennett’s view, to
flawed interpretations
of the power of
eminent domain
,
required destruction, sometimes on a massive scale, of long-established neighborhoods and important cityscapes
.
Likewise, the upkeep of America’s highways has been the center of many a policy battle, waged by Republicans and Democrats alike.
Yes, we all want roads in good working condition—
but just how and who will pay for them remain contentious questions
Bennett argues persuasively that
the road forward
just might be a second, but more serious, sustained look at, and local experimentation with,
private roads and toll roads
Agree or disagree with him, Bennett has written a significant contribution to America’s ongoing debate about how her citizens should traverse, from “sea to shining sea,” its fruited plain.
In this eye-opening book, Professor James Bennett guides readers through centuries of one of the most underrated yet widely used aspects of American life—roads.
Relying on history and economic data—and with a humorous and oftentimes sharp tongue—Bennett explains how important America’s highways and byways have been to everything from policymaking to everyday life.
Crafting America’s
roads
took persuasion, planning—and more taxes than any politician could have dreamed of. And far too often their realization, thanks, in Bennett’s view, to
flawed interpretations
of the power of
eminent domain
,
required destruction, sometimes on a massive scale, of long-established neighborhoods and important cityscapes
.
Likewise, the upkeep of America’s highways has been the center of many a policy battle, waged by Republicans and Democrats alike.
Yes, we all want roads in good working condition—
but just how and who will pay for them remain contentious questions
Bennett argues persuasively that
the road forward
just might be a second, but more serious, sustained look at, and local experimentation with,
private roads and toll roads
Agree or disagree with him, Bennett has written a significant contribution to America’s ongoing debate about how her citizens should traverse, from “sea to shining sea,” its fruited plain.

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