Counterpoint to Reform: Gilbert H. Montague and the Business of Regulation
Wyatt Wells
Business History Review, 2004, vol. 78, issue 3, 423-450
Abstract:
During a career that stretched from the Progressive Era through the 1950s, Gilbert H. Montague served businesses as a lawyer and lobbyist, managing relations between companies and the government. In this capacity he had a significant impact on the evolution of regulation, particularly antitrust law. Just as important, his career provides valuable insight into the activities and attitudes of the class made up of corporate lawyers and lobbyists, which constituted an important part of the system of regulated capitalism that emerged in the United States during the first half of the twentieth century.
Date: 2004
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