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“One of the Major Educational Agencies in the United States”: Agricultural Adjustment and University Extension “One of the Major Educational Agencies in the United States”: Agricultural Adjustment and University Extension
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“The Students Need This Money”: The National Youth Administration and Federal Work-Study “The Students Need This Money”: The National Youth Administration and Federal Work-Study
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“Some Type of Education, an Education for Citizenship”: The Federal Forum Project “Some Type of Education, an Education for Citizenship”: The Federal Forum Project
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3 Building the New Deal Administrative State
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Published:November 2011
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Abstract
This chapter turns to venues that linked the New Deal state and higher education in the 1930s, when federal policymakers used higher education to help adjust the American people to life in a bureaucratic state. The country's land-grant colleges and universities proved absolutely indispensible to this state-building effort. Resting at the literal and metaphoric intersection of the state and society, but completely beholden to neither, the land grants captured the attention of entrepreneurial New Dealers in search of discreet ways to extend federal power at the grassroots. Attention to the land grants eventually spilled over to the entire higher education sector as President Roosevelt and a handful of top New Deal administrators encouraged and rewarded higher education institutions, and many of the students who attended them, for their help in combating the Great Depression. Higher education won, extending the government's reach into citizens' lives.
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