Agents of Empire
To understand the foundations of American political institutions, it's necessary to understand the rationale for British colonial institutions that survived the empire. Political institutions in England's American colonies were neither direct imports from England, nor home-grown creations of autonomous colonists. Instead, they emerged from efforts of the English Crown to assert control over their colonies amid limited English state and military capacity. Agents of Empire explores the strategic dilemmas facing a constrained crown in its attempts to assert control. The study argues that colonial institutions emerged from the crown's management of authority delegated to agents-first companies and proprietors establishing colonies; then imperial officials governing the polities they created. The institutions remaining from these strategic dynamics form the building blocks of federalism, legislative power, separation of powers, judicial review, and other institutions that comprise the American polity today.
- Allows transparent analysis of how major parts of colonial administration functioned
- Explains all strategic arguments verbally in text and formally in chapter appendices
- Provides better understanding of structure of US political institutions
- Breaks down the system of English colonial governance into explicit models of individual components
Reviews & endorsements
‘With this pioneering study, Sean Gailmard shows us that to understand the American institutional inheritance of elected legislatures with decentralized autonomy, we need to hearken back to the challenges faced by the English Crown from Jamestown forwards as it sought to extend colonial rule with limited resources. A must read for anyone interested in comparative political development.’ David Stasavage, New York University
‘We all learned (or took for granted) that the origins of America’s institutions lay in its founding documents such as the Constitution and The Federalist Papers. But in this provocative and field-changing work, Sean Gailmard asserts that America’s institutions have deeper precedents. Analyzing the historical record through the lens of modern political economy, Gailmard shows that some of the most distinctive features of the American political system, such as separation of powers and judicial review, trace their origins to the institutions that the British crown created to resolve agency problems in its 17th century New World colonies. The prevailing narrative that resides in our history and social studies textbooks will have to be updated in response to the evidence and analysis presented in this book.’ Avidit Acharya, Professor of Political Science, Stanford University
‘With diligence and rigor, Sean Gailmard demonstrates the imperial origins of arrangements at the core of the American democratic republic - representative assemblies, separation of powers, judicial review. Combining imaginative formal models with broad historical research into institutions that scholarship has largely forgotten, Agents of Empire breathes new life into American political development.’ Daniel Carpenter, author of Democracy by Petition: Popular Politics in Transformation, 1790–1870
‘This brilliant book poses questions we have failed to ask, answers them compellingly, and jump-starts debates we'd benefit from. Along the way, Agents of Empire integrates the study of political development into the mainstream study of U.S. politics, and shows us how British North America should inform debates about comparative political and economic development. A triumph!’ Robert Mickey, University of Michigan
‘[A] welcome addition for graduate students and faculty. Recommended.’ J. L. Wallace, CHOICE
Product details
May 2024Paperback
9781009316927
336 pages
230 × 151 × 19 mm
0.487kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- 1. Economic incentives: the origins of colonial autonomy
- 2. Governance incentives: the balanced colonial constitution
- 3. From incentives to institutions: contractual imperialism in practice
- 4. The rise and fall of autocratic imperialism
- 5. Economic regulation: imperial administration in the colonies
- 6. Political regulation: legislative review and colonial autonomy
- 7. Colonial assembly power under regulatory imperialism
- 8. The institutional bequests of empire.