This article is about the author\u27s experience with visiting New York during it\u27s rebirth after 9/11. He speaks about the history of both cities and how they have each grown into their own to become places of future enterprise and cultural cohesiveness. Reprinted from New England Journal of Public Policy 21, no. 1 (2006), article 9
This article is commentary on a paper presented at a conference organized by the Federal Reserve Ban...
New York City. The Big Apple. Home of Central Park, Ground Zero, and Times Square. Popular tourist a...
This article was the keynote address for a conference organized by the Federal Reserve Bank of New Y...
This article is about the author\u27s experience with visiting New York during it\u27s rebirth after...
The works discussed in this article include: City of the World: New York and Its People, by Bernie B...
The works discussed in this article include: City of the World: New York and Its People, by Bernie B...
The article presents functional, spatial and symbolic transformations of New York City and its archi...
The author talks about his time and associations with the University of Massachusetts Boston. He als...
The author talks about his time and associations with the University of Massachusetts Boston. He als...
This article posits that the destruction of the South Bronx during the 1960s and 1970s was municipal...
Shaun O\u27Connell\u27s essay, Remembering Who We Were, gives a Boston perspective to our search f...
This article assesses the manner in which terrorist attacks have been remembered and forgotten withi...
The article analyzes the depiction of Brooklyn as an urban region in a number of recent American nov...
The chapter examines how New York (and Manhattan specifically) has been viewed in recent popular cul...
Focusing on post-9/11 New York City as a case study, the central hypothesis of this dissertation is ...
This article is commentary on a paper presented at a conference organized by the Federal Reserve Ban...
New York City. The Big Apple. Home of Central Park, Ground Zero, and Times Square. Popular tourist a...
This article was the keynote address for a conference organized by the Federal Reserve Bank of New Y...
This article is about the author\u27s experience with visiting New York during it\u27s rebirth after...
The works discussed in this article include: City of the World: New York and Its People, by Bernie B...
The works discussed in this article include: City of the World: New York and Its People, by Bernie B...
The article presents functional, spatial and symbolic transformations of New York City and its archi...
The author talks about his time and associations with the University of Massachusetts Boston. He als...
The author talks about his time and associations with the University of Massachusetts Boston. He als...
This article posits that the destruction of the South Bronx during the 1960s and 1970s was municipal...
Shaun O\u27Connell\u27s essay, Remembering Who We Were, gives a Boston perspective to our search f...
This article assesses the manner in which terrorist attacks have been remembered and forgotten withi...
The article analyzes the depiction of Brooklyn as an urban region in a number of recent American nov...
The chapter examines how New York (and Manhattan specifically) has been viewed in recent popular cul...
Focusing on post-9/11 New York City as a case study, the central hypothesis of this dissertation is ...
This article is commentary on a paper presented at a conference organized by the Federal Reserve Ban...
New York City. The Big Apple. Home of Central Park, Ground Zero, and Times Square. Popular tourist a...
This article was the keynote address for a conference organized by the Federal Reserve Bank of New Y...