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Recovering the neglected importance of Harry Hopkins’ role in the New Deal: insights for management and organization studies

Nicholous M. Deal (Department of Business Administration, Mount Saint Vincent University, Halifax, Canada)
Mark D. MacIsaac (Department of Management, Saint Francis Xavier University, Antigonish, Canada)
Albert J. Mills (Department of Management, Saint Mary’s University, Halifax, Canada and Department of Business, Ita-Suomen yliopisto, Kuopio, Finland)
Jean Helms Mills (Department of Management, Saint Mary’s University, Halifax, Canada and Jyväskylä School of Business and Economics, Jyväskylä University, Jyvaskyla, Finland)

Journal of Management History

ISSN: 1751-1348

Article publication date: 3 October 2023

73

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to revisit the potential of the New Deal as a research context in management and organization studies and, in doing so, forward the role one of its chief architects, Harry Hopkins, played in managing the economic crisis. The exploration takes us to multiple layers that work together to form context around Hopkins including the Great Depression, the Roosevelt Administration, and ultimately, the New Deal. By raising Harry Hopkins as an exemplar of historical-narrative exclusion, the authors can advance the understanding of his role in the New Deal and how his actions produced early insights about management (e.g. modern crisis management).

Design/methodology/approach

The paper experiments with the methodological assemblage of ANTi-History and microhistorical analysis that the authors call “ANTi-Microhistory” to examine the life narrative of Harry Hopkins, his early association with President Franklin D. Roosevelt and later, the New Deal. To accomplish this, the authors undertake a programme of archival research (e.g. the digital repository of The Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum) and assess various materials (e.g. speeches, biographies and memoirs) from across multiple spaces.

Findings

The findings suggest Harry Hopkins to be a much more powerful actor in mobilizing New Deal policies and their effect on early management thought than what was previously accepted. In the process, the authors found that because of durable associations with Roosevelt, key policy architects of the same ilk as Harry Hopkins (e.g. Frances Perkins, Henry Wallace, Lewis Douglas, and others) and their contributions have been marginalized. This finding illustrates the significant potential of little-known historical figures and how they might shed new insight on the development of the field and management practice.

Originality/value

The aim is to demonstrate the potential of engaging historical research in management with the individual – Harry Hopkins – as a unit of analysis. By engaging historical research on the individual – be it well-known or obscure figures of the past – the authors are considering how they contribute to the understanding of phenomena (e.g. New Deal, Progressivism or Keynesian economics). The authors build on research that brings to focus forgotten people, communities and ideas in management studies but go further in advocating for space in the research to consider the scholarly potential of the individual.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to acknowledge the hard work of the editorial team and for their care in the review process, the anonymous reviewers in the journal and the Academy of Management conference in 2023 for helping to improve our arguments.

Citation

Deal, N.M., MacIsaac, M.D., Mills, A.J. and Helms Mills, J. (2023), "Recovering the neglected importance of Harry Hopkins’ role in the New Deal: insights for management and organization studies", Journal of Management History, Vol. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print. https://doi.org/10.1108/JMH-09-2019-0057

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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