Democracy in Power, Sandeep Vaheesan
Democracy in Power, Sandeep Vaheesan
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Democracy in Power
A History of Electrification in the United States

Author: Sandeep Vaheesan

Narrator: Auto-narrated

Unabridged: 13 hr 16 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 12/04/2024


Synopsis

Private money, public good, and the original fight for control of America’s energy industry. Until the 1930s, financial interests dominated electrical power in the United States. That changed with President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal which restructured the industry. The government expanded public ownership, famously through the Tennessee Valley Authority, and promoted a new kind of utility: the rural electric cooperative that brought light and power to millions in the countryside. Since then, public and cooperative utilities have persisted as an alternative to shareholder control. Democracy in Power traces the rise of publicly governed utilities in the twentieth-century electrification of America. Sandeep Vaheesan shows that the path to accountability in America’s power sector was beset by bureaucratic challenges and fierce private resistance. Through a detailed and critical examination of this evolution, Vaheesan offers a blueprint for a publicly led and managed path to decarbonization. Democracy in Power is at once an essential history, a deeply relevant accounting of successes and failures, and a guide on how to avoid repeating past mistakes.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Benjamin on December 12, 2024

Meticulously researched, Vaheesan takes a sweeping historical view peppered with compelling characters while narrating the struggle over electrification. If you’ve read about turn of the 20th century populism and wondered what that small-d democratic impulse could look like as a governing vision, “D......more

Goodreads review by Matthew on May 14, 2025

Efficiently covers 130+ years of political and technological history (no small feat). Provides small-scale and large-scale hope for a future that will likely not exist for far too long. Only critique would be that I wish it were a bit more data-centic and bit less anectode-centric.......more