Detractors have called it The Mistake on the Lake. It was once America’s Comeback City. According to author J. Mark Souther, Cleveland has long sought to defeat its perceived civic malaise. Believing in Cleveland chronicles how city leaders used imagery and rhetoric to combat and, at times, accommodate urban and economic decline. Souther explores Cleveland\u27s downtown revitalization efforts, its neighborhood renewal and restoration projects, and its fight against deindustrialization. He shows how the city reshaped its image when it was bolstered by sports team victories. But Cleveland was not always on the upswing. Souther places the city\u27s history in the postwar context when the city and metropolitan area were divided by uneven gr...
Not having a reason to be is the human crisis. Developing worth is the cure. Such is the case not ju...
Downtown revitalization is clearly in the minds of many communities throughout North America. The d...
The paper argues that the case of the city of Cleveland offers three main examples of alternative re...
Historians have devoted ample attention to the urban crisis, but few have explored symbolic actions ...
This critique will analyze the politics of Cleveland\u27s modern redevelopment efforts, focusing on ...
Contemporary urban scholars examine the political economy, social development, and history of Clevel...
Chronicle of hearts that hoped, minds that planned and hands that toiled, to make a city great and ...
Some frustrated business heads starting in the 1970s insinuated that older Rustbelt centers includin...
By now the story is familiar: A once-booming midwestern city whose growth was fueled by manufacturin...
This book addresses many of the common reasons why the so-called “Rust Belt” cities suffered decline...
With the 2010 census tallied, Cleveland officially hit a 100-year low for population. The community ...
The neighborhood crisis of the 1970s in Cleveland was central to the formation of the community deve...
This article addresses the problems of older suburbs bordering central cities; these suburbs are now...
Akron, Ohio, currently the 5th largest city in Ohio, is located 39 miles south of Ohio\u27s 2nd larg...
This essay aims to understand the decline of a specific community, Cleveland’s historic inner-ring s...
Not having a reason to be is the human crisis. Developing worth is the cure. Such is the case not ju...
Downtown revitalization is clearly in the minds of many communities throughout North America. The d...
The paper argues that the case of the city of Cleveland offers three main examples of alternative re...
Historians have devoted ample attention to the urban crisis, but few have explored symbolic actions ...
This critique will analyze the politics of Cleveland\u27s modern redevelopment efforts, focusing on ...
Contemporary urban scholars examine the political economy, social development, and history of Clevel...
Chronicle of hearts that hoped, minds that planned and hands that toiled, to make a city great and ...
Some frustrated business heads starting in the 1970s insinuated that older Rustbelt centers includin...
By now the story is familiar: A once-booming midwestern city whose growth was fueled by manufacturin...
This book addresses many of the common reasons why the so-called “Rust Belt” cities suffered decline...
With the 2010 census tallied, Cleveland officially hit a 100-year low for population. The community ...
The neighborhood crisis of the 1970s in Cleveland was central to the formation of the community deve...
This article addresses the problems of older suburbs bordering central cities; these suburbs are now...
Akron, Ohio, currently the 5th largest city in Ohio, is located 39 miles south of Ohio\u27s 2nd larg...
This essay aims to understand the decline of a specific community, Cleveland’s historic inner-ring s...
Not having a reason to be is the human crisis. Developing worth is the cure. Such is the case not ju...
Downtown revitalization is clearly in the minds of many communities throughout North America. The d...
The paper argues that the case of the city of Cleveland offers three main examples of alternative re...