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  1. The Conscience of a Liberal is a 2007 book written by economist and Nobel laureate Paul Krugman. It was 24th on the New York Times Best Seller list in November 2007. The title was used originally in Senator Paul Wellstone's book of the same name in 2001. Wellstone's title was a response to Barry Goldwater's 1960 book The Conscience of a ...

  2. Dec 23, 2008 · The Conscience of a Liberal. Paperback – Dec 23 2008. by Paul Krugman (Author) 4.5 366 ratings. See all formats and editions. "The most consistent and courageous—and unapologetic—liberal partisan in American journalism." —Michael Tomasky, New York Review of Books.

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    • WW Norton
    • $17.5
    • Paul Krugman
  3. In 1960 a brash young conservative writer named L. Brent Bozell Jr. ghost-wrote a book for a brash Republican senator from Arizona named Barry Goldwater. That book, “The Conscience of a ...

  4. Dec 3, 2010 · Seeking to understand both what happened to middle-class America and what it will take to achieve a "new New Deal," Krugman has woven together a nuanced account of three generations of history with sharp political, social, and economic analysis.

  5. Dec 13, 2021 · The conscience of a liberal. Today's most widely read economist challenges America to reclaim the values that made it great. Here he studies the past eighty years of American history, from the reforms that tamed the harsh inequality of the Gilded Age to the unraveling of that achievement and the reemergence of immense economic and political ...

  6. Oct 1, 2007 · Economist and New York Times columnist Krugman's stimulating manifesto aims to galvanize today's progressives the way Barry Goldwater's The Conscience of a Conservative did right-wingers in 1964. Krugman's great theme is economic equality and the liberal politics that support it.

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  8. Paul Krugman, a Nobel Prize-winning economist, advocates for American political liberalism. His book responds to The Conscience of a Conservative written by Barry Goldwater in 1960. Published nearly 50 years later, this response is more detailed and more attuned to the present.

    • Paul Krugman
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