In this lavishly illustrated, meticulously researched book, Richard White analyzes the city's planning and how it contributed to Toronto becoming a functional, world-class city. Focusing on the critical period from 1940 to 1980, he examines how planners sought to shape the city and the region amid a maelstrom of local and international influences and obstacles. Planning Toronto offers the first comprehensive explanation of how Toronto's postwar plans - city, metropolitan, and regional - came to...
Gender in Urban Education: Strategies for Student Achievement
A Different View of Urban Schools (Counterpoints, #291)
by Kitty Kelly Epstein
The revised edition of A Different View of Urban Schools updates a unique story about the realities of urban education in America and provides new insights on the origin of urban education issues; the route to a diverse and effective teaching force; and the impact of federal legislation and corporate involvement on urban schools. Dr. Epstein’s analysis of problems is fascinating; her program for the creation of joyful engaging education is equally impressive. The result is a new perspective on w...
Los Angeles came of age in the 1920s. The great boom of that decade gave shape to the L.A. of today: its vast suburban sprawl and reliance on the automobile, its prominence as a financial and industrial center, and the rise of Hollywood as the film capital of the world. This collection of original essays explores the making of the Los Angeles metropolis during this remarkable decade. The authors examine the city's racial, political, cultural, and industrial dynamics, making this volume an essent...
Today's American cities and suburbs are the sites of "thick injustice"-unjust power relations that are deeply and densely concentrated as well as opaque and seemingly intractable. Thick injustice is hard to see, to assign responsibility for, and to change. Identifying these often invisible and intransigent problems, this volume addresses foundational questions about what justice requires in the contemporary metropolis. Essays focus on inequality within and among cities and suburbs; articulate pr...
Hampstead Garden Suburb was founded by Dame Henrietta Barnett and was described as a nearly perfect example of the English invention. This edition features an account of the Suburb, and sets architectural and planning achievements in context, historically and socially. It also paints a picture of both the vision and reality of 'Henrietta's Dream'.
Yemenis constitute the oldest group of Muslim settlers in Britain. They laboured in Britain's seafaring towns in the early twentieth century, and played an essential, yet little-known, role in her industrial heartlands after World War II. This book explores the intersections of the themes of racism, class and resistance in the life-stories of Yemeni former steelworkers in Sheffield, Britain's major steel-producing city. These main biographical themes are examined within the broader context of po...
The Garden City Movement Up-To-Date (Studies in International Planning History)
by Ewart Gladstone Culpin
This work was written and compiled by the then Secretary of the Garden Cities and Town Planning Association in 1913. It shows just how much the conception of the garden city had been broadened from Howard's original texts. Indeed the Association's own name had been broadened to add the newly emergent practice and theory of town planning to the original focus. Alongside the garden city, recognition is now given to the burgeoning numbers of garden suburbs and garden villages. Many examples of the...
Global City Futures (Antipode Book) (Geographies of Justice and Social Transformation)
by Natalie Oswin
Global City Futures offers a queer analysis of urban and national development in Singapore, the Southeast Asian city-state commonly cast as a leading 'global city.' Much discourse on Singapore focuses on its extraordinary socioeconomic development, and on the fact that many city and national governors around the world see it as a developmental model. But counter-narratives complicate this success story, pointing out rising income inequalities, the lack of a social safety net, an unjust migrant l...
This book explores the significance of the international book town movement and its impact on contemporary society. It examines how book towns have emerged and how their culture and unique characteristics help to explain a steadily growing phenomenon that has enabled peripheral communities around the world to reclaim their economic futures and impact on the cultural sphere as increasingly powerful sites and sources of creativity. Regenerating Regional Culture assesses why, at a time when the boo...
Urbanization Beyond Municipal Boundaries (Directions in Development: Countries and Regions)
Ein Viertel in Bewegung (Europaeische Hochschulschriften / European University Studie, #785)
by Monika Leopold-Rieks
Aus der raumlichen Perspektive eines sozialstrukturell gemischten Viertels nimmt die auf einem 40jahrigen Langsschnitt basierende Studie einen in der neueren Forschung noch unberucksichtigten Typus von Stadtteil ins Visier. Indem die Mikroanalyse stadtischen Lebens gleichermassen die Dimension wie die Dynamik raumlicher und sozialer Veranderungen widerspiegelt, erhalten die berufliche Vielfalt und der sozialstrukturelle Wandel, die verbreitete Kurzlebigkeit und Unsicherheit des Hausbesitzes wie...
Compares village life with town life in England, from the Middle Ages to the present, describing how technological developments have blurred the differences.
This book analyses post-migration social networks via the notion of superdiversity. Approaching diversity as relational and complexly configured through multiple migration-related differentiations, it challenges us to rethink how we talk about and classify migrant networks. Based on research in two cities of migration - London and Toronto - the author investigates how we can use a superdiversity lens to discuss migrant networks in urban contexts. Focusing on the personal networks of Pacific Is...
Based on research in a west London neighbourhood, this paper aims to expose the inadequacies of current arguments about the role of residence on class relations in a gentrifying neighbourhood. The nature of city-wide social relations suggests that ties to neighbourhood also tend to be related to stage-in-the-lifecycle and workplace alongside class considerations. The paper reveals: an analysis of gentrification must include workplace as well as home and be situated at a city-wide scale rather th...
Documents the harrowing twelve-day period in Chicago in 1919 during which a blimp crash, a race riot, a crippling transit strike, and a sensational child murder case challenged the city's modernization efforts.
Winner of the 2001 Spiro Kostof Book Award from the Society of Architectural Historians. "It'll be a great place if they ever finish it," O. Henry wrote about New York City. This laconic remark captures the relentlessly transitory character of New York, and it points toward Max Page's synthetic perspective. Against the prevailing motif of a naturally expanding metropolis, Page argues that the early-twentieth-century city was dominated by the politics of destruction and rebuilding that became t...
The Politics of Urban Planning (American Civilization)
by William C Johnson