While Detroit’s bankruptcy has received the most publicity, it was only one of many cities unable to pay their bills in the aftermath of the 2008 financial collapse. Mark Davidson explains how the landscape of urban politics has been redrawn in the wake of the Great Recession. He writes that the role of the state in municipal affairs has greatly expanded and that the threat of bankruptcy, once viewed as an exceptional measure, is now being used as gainful method of reducing public pension obligations and solving deficit problems
Austerity appears to be a globally coordinated restructuring process, where international and nation...
The years from 2011 to 2013 were remarkable in municipal bankruptcy terms. During those years, sever...
Today’s Detroit has come to represent more than a single city in decline. Its abandoned landscape, f...
The city of Detroit was one of the major casualties of the 2008 financial crisis, finally filing for...
While the Great Recession officially ended six years ago, it still has implications for how cities a...
Accounts of urban crisis in the United States focus largely on issues of deindustrialization, depopu...
On July 18, 2013, the city of Detroit filed for the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history. De...
Two cities loom large in the history of American urban restructuring. New York City\u27s 1975 techni...
Taking as its focus the not-so-special case of Detroit, which recently experienced the largest munic...
The financial crisis that has afflicted America’s cities and states for the past decade is far from ...
Since 2007, the United States’ economy has forged a new normal, combining deep recession, economic r...
Post-recession urban restructuring in the U.S. has involved national and state governments pushing b...
Abstract Introduction Many scholars have discussed urban decline, and one of the emerging discourses...
Recent proceedings involving large municipalities such as Detroit, Stockton, and Vallejo illustrate ...
This chapter sets out to explore how Detroit has been framed-legally, fiscally, politically, and dis...
Austerity appears to be a globally coordinated restructuring process, where international and nation...
The years from 2011 to 2013 were remarkable in municipal bankruptcy terms. During those years, sever...
Today’s Detroit has come to represent more than a single city in decline. Its abandoned landscape, f...
The city of Detroit was one of the major casualties of the 2008 financial crisis, finally filing for...
While the Great Recession officially ended six years ago, it still has implications for how cities a...
Accounts of urban crisis in the United States focus largely on issues of deindustrialization, depopu...
On July 18, 2013, the city of Detroit filed for the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history. De...
Two cities loom large in the history of American urban restructuring. New York City\u27s 1975 techni...
Taking as its focus the not-so-special case of Detroit, which recently experienced the largest munic...
The financial crisis that has afflicted America’s cities and states for the past decade is far from ...
Since 2007, the United States’ economy has forged a new normal, combining deep recession, economic r...
Post-recession urban restructuring in the U.S. has involved national and state governments pushing b...
Abstract Introduction Many scholars have discussed urban decline, and one of the emerging discourses...
Recent proceedings involving large municipalities such as Detroit, Stockton, and Vallejo illustrate ...
This chapter sets out to explore how Detroit has been framed-legally, fiscally, politically, and dis...
Austerity appears to be a globally coordinated restructuring process, where international and nation...
The years from 2011 to 2013 were remarkable in municipal bankruptcy terms. During those years, sever...
Today’s Detroit has come to represent more than a single city in decline. Its abandoned landscape, f...