A qualitative social geographical study of a community group's reaction to rapid urban growth in a free-standing service class town, Chapel Hill, NC is reported. Members of the Chapel Hill Alliance of Neighborhoods had developed a strong sense of place in the town. Growth threatened elements of that sense of place. Alliance members thought the cause of the threat lay within the Town Council's administration of Chapel Hill's planning process. They worked to have that process changed, to make it more rational. Their reaction to growth as defense of place is described.
was intentionally created with many of the design and planning principles that active-living advocat...
This project examined the interactions between community relationships and physical space in Charlot...
ABSTRACT Over the past two decades, regions of greatest population growth in the United States have ...
In the past few decades, economic growth in Chapel Hill has fueled the demand for housing in the tow...
Small towns throughout the country are struggling to balance the need for economic development with ...
Regime theory predicts that opponents of a regime’s pursuit of economic development will have limite...
The decline of central business districts (CBDs) has become an issue in large metropolitan cities an...
[ACCESS RESTRICTED TO THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI AT REQUEST OF AUTHOR.] This qualitative case study ...
This research seeks to explain contrasting patterns of population stability and decline at both the ...
Levels of efficacy and transparency in local government decision-making are often contested by citiz...
Historic Preservation and Urban Housing Policy; A Housing Reinvestment Strategy for Durham, North Ca...
For the last few years, a debate has been raging in Greensboro: economic growth vs. our quality of l...
This session will describe a fight led by local, largely blue-collar citizens of a town outside of A...
During the summer of 1994, a small stretch of West Franklin Street in downtown Chapel Hill was trans...
This edition of Carolina Forum includes the following: THE NEIGHBORHOOD MOVEMENT IN URBAN AMERICA: W...
was intentionally created with many of the design and planning principles that active-living advocat...
This project examined the interactions between community relationships and physical space in Charlot...
ABSTRACT Over the past two decades, regions of greatest population growth in the United States have ...
In the past few decades, economic growth in Chapel Hill has fueled the demand for housing in the tow...
Small towns throughout the country are struggling to balance the need for economic development with ...
Regime theory predicts that opponents of a regime’s pursuit of economic development will have limite...
The decline of central business districts (CBDs) has become an issue in large metropolitan cities an...
[ACCESS RESTRICTED TO THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI AT REQUEST OF AUTHOR.] This qualitative case study ...
This research seeks to explain contrasting patterns of population stability and decline at both the ...
Levels of efficacy and transparency in local government decision-making are often contested by citiz...
Historic Preservation and Urban Housing Policy; A Housing Reinvestment Strategy for Durham, North Ca...
For the last few years, a debate has been raging in Greensboro: economic growth vs. our quality of l...
This session will describe a fight led by local, largely blue-collar citizens of a town outside of A...
During the summer of 1994, a small stretch of West Franklin Street in downtown Chapel Hill was trans...
This edition of Carolina Forum includes the following: THE NEIGHBORHOOD MOVEMENT IN URBAN AMERICA: W...
was intentionally created with many of the design and planning principles that active-living advocat...
This project examined the interactions between community relationships and physical space in Charlot...
ABSTRACT Over the past two decades, regions of greatest population growth in the United States have ...