Urban containment does not fit easily with popular images of the United States. We all know that the land of opportunity has wide-open spaces, low-density suburbs, automobile-dependent lifestyles, and large shopping malls: the result of unrestricted, successful individualism and commerce. Media suggest that these places contrast with the problematic ones we see on films and in the news: impoverished and dangerous ghettos; failed town centers; flooded, polluted, or devastated run-down suburbs; trailer parks; and other less attractive places where poor people and members of low-status ethnic minorities live. Nelson, Dawkins, and Sanchez dispel the simplistic myth that perpetuates the world of West Side Story, The Graduate, and Desperate Hous...
It is common knowledge that racial segregation is not restricted to the South. Every major industria...
In the growing catalog of books about the decline of the postwar American city, race dominates the n...
Reviewing P. Grogan & T. Proscio, Comeback Cities: A Blueprint for Urban Neighborhood Revival, Westv...
Urban containment does not fit easily with popular images of the United States. We all know that the...
In the edited collection Urban Neighborhoods in a New Era: Revitalization Politics in the Postindust...
Gated communities have received an increasing amount of attention over the past two decades. This is...
Review of: The City as a Human Environment (Duane G. LeVine & Arthur C. Upton eds., Praeger Publishe...
Gentrification is often portrayed as a two-sided war: the gentrifiers versus the gentrified. But thr...
Few can argue about the transformative and profound impact of gentrification on the postwar American...
In Dead End: Suburban Sprawl and the Rebirth of American Urbanism, Benjamin Ross pulls together a na...
The article reviews the book Urban Outcasts: A Comparative Sociology of Advanced Marginality, by L...
Urban development history has been replete with competing claims to legitimacy in land ownership and...
For the English novelist Anthony Burgess, writing on New York in a 1976 contribution to a Time/Life ...
Because blacks who reside in cities and suburbs are a popular subject among urban specialists, criti...
How to not only arrest the decline of cities constituting the American Rust Belt, but also repositio...
It is common knowledge that racial segregation is not restricted to the South. Every major industria...
In the growing catalog of books about the decline of the postwar American city, race dominates the n...
Reviewing P. Grogan & T. Proscio, Comeback Cities: A Blueprint for Urban Neighborhood Revival, Westv...
Urban containment does not fit easily with popular images of the United States. We all know that the...
In the edited collection Urban Neighborhoods in a New Era: Revitalization Politics in the Postindust...
Gated communities have received an increasing amount of attention over the past two decades. This is...
Review of: The City as a Human Environment (Duane G. LeVine & Arthur C. Upton eds., Praeger Publishe...
Gentrification is often portrayed as a two-sided war: the gentrifiers versus the gentrified. But thr...
Few can argue about the transformative and profound impact of gentrification on the postwar American...
In Dead End: Suburban Sprawl and the Rebirth of American Urbanism, Benjamin Ross pulls together a na...
The article reviews the book Urban Outcasts: A Comparative Sociology of Advanced Marginality, by L...
Urban development history has been replete with competing claims to legitimacy in land ownership and...
For the English novelist Anthony Burgess, writing on New York in a 1976 contribution to a Time/Life ...
Because blacks who reside in cities and suburbs are a popular subject among urban specialists, criti...
How to not only arrest the decline of cities constituting the American Rust Belt, but also repositio...
It is common knowledge that racial segregation is not restricted to the South. Every major industria...
In the growing catalog of books about the decline of the postwar American city, race dominates the n...
Reviewing P. Grogan & T. Proscio, Comeback Cities: A Blueprint for Urban Neighborhood Revival, Westv...