Synopses & Reviews
This collection of readings examines the interaction of economy, culture, politics, policy and space within the United States and the United Kingdom. It brings together in one place unabridged selections from recent works by authors who have dramatically transformed the field of urban theory. The readings deal with the changing urban and regional system, its social impacts, the effect of publicly-sponsored redevelopment programs, and the cultural meanings of spatial relations.
For the second edition, more than half of the readings are new and the introduction and section prefaces have been revised. A section on the city and "the new urbanism" has been added, and there is increased emphasis on design, tourism, sustainability and culture. Many of the additions and replacements are by the same authors as the readings in the previous edition but are more recent, keeping the volume current. Comprehensive and well organised, this convenient reader will continue to stimulate classroom debate.
Review
"This remarkable multidisciplinary anthology provides the theoretical tools for readers to make sense of the urban world. Essays by leading scholars review the ideas and concepts that underpin urban policy and planning-from cities' functions in a regional and global context to their role as reflectors of urban culture and fantasy. Readers will be challenged by analyses of urban racism and rights of citizenship, growth machines and tourist bubbles, global cities and the new urbanism." John Logan, University of Albany
Synopsis
This collection of readings examines the interaction of economy, culture, politics, policy and space within the United States and the United Kingdom. For the second edition, more than half of the readings are new and the introduction and section prefaces have been revised. A section on the city and "the new urbanism" has been added, and there is increased emphasis on design, tourism, sustainability and culture.
* Examines the interaction of economy, culture, politics, policy and space within the United States and the United Kingdom.
* Brings together in one place unabridged selections from recent works by authors who have dramatically transformed the field of urban theory.
* More than half of the readings are new and the introduction and section prefaces have been revised.
* A section on the city and "the new urbanism" has been added, and there is increased emphasis on design, tourism, sustainability and culture.
Synopsis
This collection of readings examines the interaction of economy, culture, politics, policy and space within the United States and the United Kingdom. It brings together in one place unabridged selections from recent works by authors who have dramatically transformed the field of urban theory. The readings deal with the changing urban and regional system, its social impacts, the effect of publicly-sponsored redevelopment programs, and the cultural meanings of spatial relations.
For the second edition, more than half of the readings are new and the introduction and section prefaces have been revised. A section on the city and "the new urbanism" has been added, and there is increased emphasis on design, tourism, sustainability and culture. Many of the additions and replacements are by the same authors as the readings in the previous edition but are more recent, keeping the volume current. Comprehensive and well organised, this convenient reader will continue to stimulate classroom debate.
About the Author
Susan S. Fainstein is Professor of Urban Planning at Columbia University. Her research has focused on planning theory, comparative public policy, urban redevelopment, and citizen participation. Among her books are
Urban Political Movements, Restructuring the City, The City Builders (second edition 2001),
Divided Cities (co-edited with Ian Gordon and Michael Harloe; Blackwell, 1992), and
Cities and Visitors (co-edited with Lily M. Hoffman and Dennis R. Judd; Blackwell 2003).
Scott Campbell is Assistant Professor of Urban Planning and Policy Development at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. His research has focused on defense-industrial cities, regional and environmental planning, and German cities. He is co-author of The Rise of the Gunbelt (with Ann Markusen, Peter Hall and Sabina Deitrick) and of a forthcoming book on Berlin.
Table of Contents
List of Figures.
List of Tables.
Acknowledgments.
Introduction: Theories of Urban Development and Their Implications for Policy Planning.
Part I: The Changing Urban and Regional System:.
Introduction.
1. Bourgeois Utopias: Visions of Suburbia: Robert Fishman.
2. Cities in a World Economy: Saskia Sassen.
3. New Industrial Cities? The Four Faces of Silicon Valley: Mia Gray, Elyse Golob, Ann Markusen, Sam Ock Park.
4. Virtual Ecology: A Brief Environmental History of Silicon Valley: Aaron Sachs.
5. Regulation Theory, Post-Fordism and Urban Politics: Joe Painter.
6. The Changing World Economy and Urban Restructuring: Susan S. Fainstein.
Part II: Race and Inequality:.
Introduction.
7. From the Metropolis to Globalization: The Dialectics of Race and Urban Form: William W. Goldsmith.
8. Poverty, Social Rights and the Quality of Citizenship: Roger Lawson and William Julius Wilson.
9. Race, Class, and Segregation: Discourses about African Americans: Norman Fainstein.
Part III: Redevelopment and Urban Transformation:.
Introduction.
10. The City as a Growth Machine: John R. Logan and Harvey L. Molotch.
11. Partnership and the Pursuit of the Private City: Gregory D. Squires.
12. Gentrification, the Frontier, and the Restructuring of Urban Space: Neil Smith.
13. Promoting Tourism in US Cities: Dennis R. Judd.
Part IV: Culture, Design, and Urban Form:.
Introduction.
14. Fantasy City: Pleasure and Profit in the Postmodern Metropolis: John Hannigan.
15. Whose Culture? Whose City?: Sharon Zukin.
16. See you in Disneyland: Michael Sorkin.
17. The New Urbanism: Douglas Kelbaugh.
18. Urban or Suburban?: Carol Burns, Robert Campbell, Andres Duany, Jerold Kayden and Alex Krieger.
19. Social Justice, Postmodernism, and the City: David Harvey.
Index.