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How did
Americans grow so dependent on petroleum, and what can we learn from our
history that will help us craft successful policies for the future? In
this timely and absorbing book, Paul Sabin challenges us to see politics
and law as crucial forces behind the dramatic growth of the U.S. oil
market during the twentieth century. Using pre-World War II California
as a case study of oil production and consumption, Sabin demonstrates
how struggles in the legislature and courts over property rights,
regulatory law, and public investment determined the shape of the
state's petroleum landscape.
Crude Politics shatters the enduring myth of "free
markets" by demonstrating how political decisions affected the
institutions that underlie California's oil economy and how today's oil
market and price structure depend significantly on the ways in which
policy questions were answered before World War II. Sabin's concise and
probing analysis casts fresh light on the historical relationship
between business and government and on the origins of contemporary
problems such as climate change and urban sprawl. Incisive, engaging,
and meticulously researched, Crude Politics illuminates an
important chapter in U.S. environmental, legal, business, and political
history and the history of the American West.
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