Urban America in the Eighties

Urban America in the Eighties

Author: Donald A. Hicks

Publisher: Transaction Publishers

Published:

Total Pages: 142

ISBN-13: 9781412840781

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First published in Washington by the President's Commission for a National Agenda for the Eighties in 1980.


Visionaries and Planners

Visionaries and Planners

Author: Stanley Buder

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 1990-07-26

Total Pages: 289

ISBN-13: 0195362888

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For nearly a century the Garden City movement has represented one end of a continuum in an ongoing debate about the future of the modern city. In 1898 Ebenezer Howard envisioned an experimental community as the alternative to huge, teeming cities. Small, planned "garden cities" girdled by greenbelts were to serve in time as the "master key" to a higher, more cooperative stage of civilization based on ecologically balanced communities. Howard soon founded an international planning movement which ever since has represented a remarkable blend of accommodation to and protest against urban changes and the rise of the suburbs. In this interconnected history of the Garden City movement in the United States and Britain, Buder examines its influence, strengths and limitations. Howard's garden city, he shows, joined together two very different types of late-nineteenth-century experimental communities, creating a tension never fully resolved. One approach, utopian and radical in nature, challenged conventional values; the other, the model industrial towns of "enlightened" capitalists, reinforceed them. Buder traces this tension through planning history from the nineteenth-century world of visionaries, philanthropy, and self help into our own with its reliance on the expert, bureaucracy, and governmental policy, shedding light on the complex changes in the way we have thought in the twentieth century about community, urban design, and indeed the process of change. His final chapters examine the world-wide enthusiasm for "New Towns" between 1945-1975 and recent political and social trends which challenge many fundamental assumptions of modern planning.


Remaking the Rust Belt

Remaking the Rust Belt

Author: Tracy Neumann

Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press

Published: 2016-06-28

Total Pages: 276

ISBN-13: 0812248279

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Remaking the Rust Belt tells the story of how local leaders throughout the Rust Belt adapted internationally circulating ideas about postindustrial redevelopment to create the jobs and amenities they believed would attract middle-class professionals, but in so doing widened and deepened economic inequality among urban residents.


Federal-city Relations in the United States

Federal-city Relations in the United States

Author: John J. Gunther

Publisher: University of Delaware Press

Published: 1990

Total Pages: 300

ISBN-13: 9780874133776

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John Gunther served thirty years as the staff head of the United States Conference of Mayors and here examines in detail the development of U.S. federal-city relations. He argues that each step of the federal-city relationship was a major effort by mayors to win intergovernmental cooperation.