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ID131526
Title ProperRush and a push and the land is ours
Other Title Informationterritorial expansion, land policy, and U.S. state formation
LanguageENG
AuthorFrymer, Paul
Publication2014.
Summary / Abstract (Note)I examine the role of US land policy in strategically controlling and moving populations around the continent with the goal of expanding borders and securing and incorporating new territory on the frontier. The government effectively used land policies and population control to enable an otherwise constrained American state to assert authority over the direction of expansion, to engineer settlement patterns in a manner to secure the territory without a large military, and to maintain an official fidelity to constitutional principles while engineering a dominant racial vision. I examine both the success and failures of these policies over the nineteenth century, with material drawn from government documents and primary sources. I discuss the consequences of this land policy for how we understand the American state in the context of comparative state and racial formation.
`In' analytical NotePerspectives on Politics Vol. 12, No.1; Mar 2014: p.119-144
Journal SourcePerspectives on Politics Vol. 12, No.1; Mar 2014: p.119-144
Key WordsUnited States ;  Land Policy ;  Populations Control ;  Racial Formation ;  Territorial Expansion