Communities on the fringes of the American metropolis have recently garnered attention as the centers of the foreclosure crisis and its aftermath. On the one hand, this attention to the urban nature of the crisis is welcome, as the metamorphosis of the mortgage fiasco into a financial crisis‐cum‐global economic meltdown turned popular attention away from the urban roots of this calamity. But this emphasis on the exurbs as the site of crisis lends itself to the misconception that they, rather than the restructuring of the metropolis as a whole, are the sole source of the crisis. This article works across multiple scales to examine how three interwoven factors — demographics, policy and capital — each reacted to the San Francisco Bay Area lan...
Urbanization in the United States since the 1980s has proceeded in an environment dominated by neoli...
Neoliberalization processes have been reshaping the landscapes of urban development for more than th...
Two cities loom large in the history of American urban restructuring. New York City\u27s 1975 techni...
Communities on the fringes of the American metropolis – exurbs, or exurbia – have recently garnered ...
AbstractThis dissertation integrates policy analysis, archival research, ethnographic field work, GI...
There is a long history in social science that connects urbanization to capitalism. This article dis...
In an article in the New York Times on 5 February 2011, entitled ‘Housing Bubbles Are Few and Far Be...
The 2008 financial crisis and its impacts on the urban landscape contributed to a proliferation of r...
Abstract: In 2008, there will be at least 2.5 million new foreclosures in the United States. Record ...
Real estate is, by definition, local as it is spatially fixed. Mortgage lending, however, has develo...
At the turn of the twentieth century, San Francisco’s most striking physical feature was the great m...
This article considers how the recent Bay Area turmoil spurred by the technology boom and its attend...
This paper deals with the question how urban crises – whether political, economic, financial, enviro...
In 2008, there will be at least 2.5 million new foreclosures in the United States. Record levels of ...
Neighborhood decline is a complex and multidimensional process. National and regional variations in ...
Urbanization in the United States since the 1980s has proceeded in an environment dominated by neoli...
Neoliberalization processes have been reshaping the landscapes of urban development for more than th...
Two cities loom large in the history of American urban restructuring. New York City\u27s 1975 techni...
Communities on the fringes of the American metropolis – exurbs, or exurbia – have recently garnered ...
AbstractThis dissertation integrates policy analysis, archival research, ethnographic field work, GI...
There is a long history in social science that connects urbanization to capitalism. This article dis...
In an article in the New York Times on 5 February 2011, entitled ‘Housing Bubbles Are Few and Far Be...
The 2008 financial crisis and its impacts on the urban landscape contributed to a proliferation of r...
Abstract: In 2008, there will be at least 2.5 million new foreclosures in the United States. Record ...
Real estate is, by definition, local as it is spatially fixed. Mortgage lending, however, has develo...
At the turn of the twentieth century, San Francisco’s most striking physical feature was the great m...
This article considers how the recent Bay Area turmoil spurred by the technology boom and its attend...
This paper deals with the question how urban crises – whether political, economic, financial, enviro...
In 2008, there will be at least 2.5 million new foreclosures in the United States. Record levels of ...
Neighborhood decline is a complex and multidimensional process. National and regional variations in ...
Urbanization in the United States since the 1980s has proceeded in an environment dominated by neoli...
Neoliberalization processes have been reshaping the landscapes of urban development for more than th...
Two cities loom large in the history of American urban restructuring. New York City\u27s 1975 techni...