The New Urban Paradigm: Critical Perspectives on the City

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Rowman & Littlefield, 1998 - 357 páginas
As economic, political, and cultural centers, cities are at the heart of most contemporary societies, as they have been for millennia. In spite of the Cassandras who periodically lament their demise or imminent death, cities have a way of coming back from their low points--of surviving economic crises, outmigration, and vexing social dilemmas. Today, many large US cities once thought to be dying have rebounded not only because of economic restructuring or high-tech industries but also because of the vigor of new migrants coming into the urban system. Significantly, the ongoing boom-bust cycles in the cities are linked ultimately to major decisions made by those at the helm of the now globalized system of contemporary capitalism. In this book, Joe R. Feagin assesses urban questions from the 'new urban sociology' perspective that has developed since the 1980s. One of the leading figures in this tradition of thought, Feagin places class and racial domination at the heart of the analysis of city life, change, and development. His approach takes into account political-economic histories and the rise and fall of their social institutions; the character and impact of their underlying systems of capitalism, racism, and patriarchy; and how these dynamics play out in the everyday lives of contemporary urbanites. Framing urban questions this way not only puts the actions of elites at the forefront of analysis, but also raises questions about their ill-gotten privileges. It features the historical conditions and institutions that protect class and racial privileges--making it clear why people in cities rebel and why we as social scientists must take a lesson from these urban rebellions, focusing future research on large-scale urban transformation.

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Cities and the New International Division of Labor An Overview
25
The Global Context of Metropolitan Growth Houston and the Oil Industry1
57
Extractive Regions in Developed Countries A Comparative Analysis of the Oil Capitals Houston and Aberdeen
83
Cities in Conflict
113
Urban Real Estate Speculation in the United States Implications for Social Science and Urban Planning
131
Irrationality in Real Estate Investment The Case of Houston
157
The Corporate Center Strategy The State in Central Cities
167
Arenas of Conflict Zoning and LandUse Reform in Critical PoliticalEconomic Perspective
179
Slavery Unwilling to Die The Background of Black Oppression in the 1980s
245
The Continuing Significance of Race Antiblack Discrimination in Public Places
265
The Continuing Significance of Racism Discrimination against Black Students in White Colleges
293
Changing Black Americans to Fit a Racist System?
321
Urban Sociology
329
The New Urban Paradigm Can It Revive Urban Sociology?
337
Index
347
About the Author
355

Are Planners Collective Capitalists? The Cases of Aberdeen and Houston
215

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Página 12 - And as those boys [in the National Guard] took back the streets of Los Angeles, block by block, my friends, we must take back our cities, and take back our culture, and take back our country.

Sobre el autor (1998)

Joe R. Feagin is professor of sociology at the University of Florida.

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