Urban communities / city life Books

3387 products


  • Bringing the Civic Back In

    Temple University Press,U.S. Bringing the Civic Back In

    Book SynopsisWith the passing of Zane L. Miller in 2016, academia lost a renowned scholar and one of the key founders of new urban history—a branch of the discipline that placed urban life at the center of American history and treated the city as an arena for civic and political action. He was a devoted, tireless mentor who published or fostered dozens of books and articles on urban history. He also co-founded Temple University Press’ foundational series Urban Life, Landscape, and Policy.Bringing the Civic Back In provides a critical overview, appreciation, and extension of Miller’s work as scholar, editor, mentor, colleague, and citizen. Included are three excerpts from Miller’s final, unfinished work, in which he presented cities as the source of a civic nationalism he viewed as fundamental to the development of American democracy. The editors—along with contributors Robert B. Fairbanks and Charles Lester—reflect on the life and work of Trade Review"[This book] should be appreciated both for the soundness of the scholarship that went into the pieces and as an affectionate and thoughtful memorial to the man who inspired them. Whether cities today can help us rekindle the spirit of 'civic nationalism' that were instrumental in creating remains to be seen. But these authors clearly hope they will, an aspiration they inherited from their mentor and colleague."—Journal of Urban Affairs

    £77.40

  • Bringing the Civic Back In

    Temple University Press,U.S. Bringing the Civic Back In

    Book SynopsisWith the passing of Zane L. Miller in 2016, academia lost a renowned scholar and one of the key founders of new urban history—a branch of the discipline that placed urban life at the center of American history and treated the city as an arena for civic and political action. He was a devoted, tireless mentor who published or fostered dozens of books and articles on urban history. He also co-founded Temple University Press’ foundational series Urban Life, Landscape, and Policy.Bringing the Civic Back In provides a critical overview, appreciation, and extension of Miller’s work as scholar, editor, mentor, colleague, and citizen. Included are three excerpts from Miller’s final, unfinished work, in which he presented cities as the source of a civic nationalism he viewed as fundamental to the development of American democracy. The editors—along with contributors Robert B. Fairbanks and Charles Lester—reflect on the life and work of Trade Review"[This book] should be appreciated both for the soundness of the scholarship that went into the pieces and as an affectionate and thoughtful memorial to the man who inspired them. Whether cities today can help us rekindle the spirit of 'civic nationalism' that were instrumental in creating remains to be seen. But these authors clearly hope they will, an aspiration they inherited from their mentor and colleague."—Journal of Urban Affairs

    £23.39

  • The Spires Still Point to Heaven  Cincinnatis

    Temple University Press,U.S. The Spires Still Point to Heaven Cincinnatis

    Book SynopsisHow nineteenth-century Cincinnati tested the boundaries of nativism, toleration, and freedomTrade Review“The Spires Still Point to Heaven is an important story about the hard-fought battle between evangelical Protestants and Catholics to save souls in Cincinnati, where revivalism became respectable and made the city a religious hub for the nation. Sectarian identity also became inseparable from sectional politics, and religious identification gave women access to the public sphere. Here, the debate about the place of religion in public education has relevance today. Matthew Smith’s study of religious competition in Cincinnati, often expressed as evangelical fervor, helps us better understand the evolution of pluralism, toleration, and liberty in American history.”—R. Douglas Hurt, Professor of History at Purdue University“Matthew Smith has immersed himself in primary and secondary sources, including often overlooked contemporaneous secondary materials, and has synthesized these into a very well-written and compelling narrative. What he demonstrates, among other things, is the relentless push toward toleration and accommodation, even though that push episodically crashed against the shoals of race, ethnicity, religion, and privilege. What is especially impressive about The Spires Still Point to Heaven is its discursive character, covering everything from geography and natural history to William Holmes McGuffey, the female seminary movement, and the (in)famous Cincinnati Bible War. This is an impressive achievement born of prodigious research.”—Randall Balmer, John Phillips Professor of Religion at Dartmouth College, and author of Passion Plays: How Religion Shaped Sports in North America"In this extensively researched volume, Smith focuses on the city of Cincinnati to explore early U.S. tensions between Christian sects, concepts of religion’s role in public education, religious tolerance, nativism, and the temperance movement, to name only the most prominent topics.... This book is very well researched and would be of vital interest to scholars of both early religion and education in the Ohio Valley.... Smith’s book is an excellent example of the type of locally focused resource to which educators and transplants can turn to understand their new homes and neighbors."—Journal of Urban Affairs"The Spires Still Point to Heaven is a well-written and broadly researched text that will be of interest to scholars of American religion and those who want to understand the development of the Western frontier."—American Catholic Studies"The Spires Still Point to Heaven offers readers a fascinating account of multifaceted religiosity in Ohio's 'Queen City' and challenges the habit of trying to wrench homogeneity from America's never less than complicated religious past."—Middle West Review

    £81.90

  • The Spires Still Point to Heaven

    Temple University Press,U.S. The Spires Still Point to Heaven

    Book SynopsisA case study about the formation of American pluralism and religious liberty, The Spires Still Point to Heaven explores why—and more importantly how—the early growth of Cincinnati influenced the changing face of the United States. Matthew Smith deftly chronicles the urban history of this thriving metropolis in the mid-nineteenth century. As Protestants and Catholics competed, building rival domestic missionary enterprises, increased religious reform and expression shaped the city. In addition, the different ethnic and religious beliefs informed debates on race, slavery, and immigration, as well as disease, temperance reform, and education.Specifically, Smith explores the Ohio Valley’s religious landscape from 1788 through thenineteenth century, examining its appeal to evangelical preachers, abolitionists, social critics, and rabbis. He traces how Cincinnati became a battleground for newly energized social reforms following a cholera epidemic, and how Trade Review“The Spires Still Point to Heaven is an important story about the hard-fought battle between evangelical Protestants and Catholics to save souls in Cincinnati, where revivalism became respectable and made the city a religious hub for the nation. Sectarian identity also became inseparable from sectional politics, and religious identification gave women access to the public sphere. Here, the debate about the place of religion in public education has relevance today. Matthew Smith’s study of religious competition in Cincinnati, often expressed as evangelical fervor, helps us better understand the evolution of pluralism, toleration, and liberty in American history.”—R. Douglas Hurt, Professor of History at Purdue University“Matthew Smith has immersed himself in primary and secondary sources, including often overlooked contemporaneous secondary materials, and has synthesized these into a very well-written and compelling narrative. What he demonstrates, among other things, is the relentless push toward toleration and accommodation, even though that push episodically crashed against the shoals of race, ethnicity, religion, and privilege. What is especially impressive about The Spires Still Point to Heaven is its discursive character, covering everything from geography and natural history to William Holmes McGuffey, the female seminary movement, and the (in)famous Cincinnati Bible War. This is an impressive achievement born of prodigious research.”—Randall Balmer, John Phillips Professor of Religion at Dartmouth College, and author of Passion Plays: How Religion Shaped Sports in North America"In this extensively researched volume, Smith focuses on the city of Cincinnati to explore early U.S. tensions between Christian sects, concepts of religion’s role in public education, religious tolerance, nativism, and the temperance movement, to name only the most prominent topics.... This book is very well researched and would be of vital interest to scholars of both early religion and education in the Ohio Valley.... Smith’s book is an excellent example of the type of locally focused resource to which educators and transplants can turn to understand their new homes and neighbors."—Journal of Urban Affairs"The Spires Still Point to Heaven is a well-written and broadly researched text that will be of interest to scholars of American religion and those who want to understand the development of the Western frontier."—American Catholic Studies"The Spires Still Point to Heaven offers readers a fascinating account of multifaceted religiosity in Ohio's 'Queen City' and challenges the habit of trying to wrench homogeneity from America's never less than complicated religious past."—Middle West Review

    £27.90

  • Regional Governance and the Politics of Housing

    Temple University Press,U.S. Regional Governance and the Politics of Housing

    Book SynopsisTrade Review"This book is a tightly argued addition to the conversation on land use and housing and adds a governance dimension that has been missing. It has value to researchers seeking to understand governance as part of the housing policy arena and is especially valuable to those in the San Francisco Bay Area, since it focuses on that region with very specific policy recommendations. With a slender 83 pages of narrative and a straightforward writing style, this book can be useful to scholars and practitioners."—Journal of Urban Affairs"In this short, well-written, and lucid book, Paul Lewis and Nicholas Marantz address the question of why American metropolitan areas fail to deliver housing, thereby precipitating the crisis of homelessness that now prevails so widely. The exemplary case that they use is the San Francisco Bay Area (CA). They address only that case, but their message applies more widely."—Journal of the American Planning Assocation“Regional Governance and the Politics of Housing in the San Francisco Bay Area does an excellent job of articulating the connection between local government fragmentation and an undersupply of housing. Lewis and Marantz synthesize past findings about regional governance and usefully situate their discussion of governance options in this existing literature. This is a concise, clear, and comprehensive primer on regionalism and what’s at stake in the discussion about regional governance.”—Juliet F. Gainsborough, Professor of Political Science at Bentley University, and author of Fenced Off: The Suburbanization of American Politics“Unlike some other books on regional planning and governance, Regional Governance and the Politics of Housing in the San Francisco Bay Area adopts a realist rather than a normative stance by assessing the potential for meaningful reform. The authors evaluate pragmatic, detailed proposals to address housing unaffordability and the jobs-housing mismatch, drawing on their extensive knowledge of the case and presenting nuanced qualitative and well-designed quantitative evidence.”—Zack Taylor, Associate Professor of Political Science at Western University, and author of Shaping the Metropolis: Institutions and Urbanization in the United States and Canada

    £47.70

  • Regional Governance and the Politics of Housing

    Temple University Press,U.S. Regional Governance and the Politics of Housing

    Book SynopsisTrade Review"This book is a tightly argued addition to the conversation on land use and housing and adds a governance dimension that has been missing. It has value to researchers seeking to understand governance as part of the housing policy arena and is especially valuable to those in the San Francisco Bay Area, since it focuses on that region with very specific policy recommendations. With a slender 83 pages of narrative and a straightforward writing style, this book can be useful to scholars and practitioners."—Journal of Urban Affairs"In this short, well-written, and lucid book, Paul Lewis and Nicholas Marantz address the question of why American metropolitan areas fail to deliver housing, thereby precipitating the crisis of homelessness that now prevails so widely. The exemplary case that they use is the San Francisco Bay Area (CA). They address only that case, but their message applies more widely."—Journal of the American Planning Assocation“Regional Governance and the Politics of Housing in the San Francisco Bay Area does an excellent job of articulating the connection between local government fragmentation and an undersupply of housing. Lewis and Marantz synthesize past findings about regional governance and usefully situate their discussion of governance options in this existing literature. This is a concise, clear, and comprehensive primer on regionalism and what’s at stake in the discussion about regional governance.”—Juliet F. Gainsborough, Professor of Political Science at Bentley University, and author of Fenced Off: The Suburbanization of American Politics“Unlike some other books on regional planning and governance, Regional Governance and the Politics of Housing in the San Francisco Bay Area adopts a realist rather than a normative stance by assessing the potential for meaningful reform. The authors evaluate pragmatic, detailed proposals to address housing unaffordability and the jobs-housing mismatch, drawing on their extensive knowledge of the case and presenting nuanced qualitative and well-designed quantitative evidence.”—Zack Taylor, Associate Professor of Political Science at Western University, and author of Shaping the Metropolis: Institutions and Urbanization in the United States and Canada

    £15.19

  • Preserving the Vanishing City

    Temple University Press,U.S. Preserving the Vanishing City

    Book SynopsisPreserving the Vanishing Cityconsiders the unique challenges, conditions, and opportunities facing Cleveland’s historic preservation community during the 1970s and 1980s. While pro-preservationists argued for the economic and revitalization benefits stemming from saving and repurposing older buildings, population loss and economic contraction prompted decades ofdeterioration, underinvestment, vacancy, and abandonment. Stephanie Ryberg-Webster uncovers the motivations, strategies, and constraints driving Cleveland’s historic preservation sector, led by the public-sector Cleveland Landmarks Commission, nonprofit Cleveland Restoration Society, and a cadre of advocates. She sheds light on the ways in which preservationists confronted severe, escalating, and sustained urban decline, which plagued Cleveland, a prototypical rust-belt industrial city.Preserving the Vanishing Citychronicles the rise of the historic preservation profession in CleTrade Review“Ryberg-Webster offers a cogent examination of Cleveland’s historic preservation movement within the context of the city’s decline in both population and economic power. Preserving the Vanishing City chronicles the way preservationists, developers, planners, and residents balanced community priorities and determined what to save. Activists leveraged strategic coalitions, enacted policy changes, and designed innovative programs to preserve the places that tell the city’s story. Their struggles and successes, as recounted by the author, can inform the tactics and priorities of today’s preservationists—especially those working in legacy cities.”—Sara C. Bronin, Professor in the College of Architecture, Art, and Planning at Cornell University, and coauthor of Historic Preservation Law“Preserving the Vanishing City offers fresh strategies for shrinking cities by focusing on what preservation contributed to Cleveland’s revitalization efforts since the 1970s. Most preservation research has emphasized the profession’s origin cities, like New Orleans, Charleston, Boston, and Philadelphia, or centered cities facing overdevelopment and gentrification. More typical places like Cleveland have what Ryberg-Webster calls a ‘staggering oversupply of built things’ and a different set of challenges. Twentieth-century Cleveland led the nation in many trends, from 1930s public housing to 1960s community development. This history of preservation in cities experiencing deindustrialization and depopulation will be enormously useful to policy stakeholders and historians.”—Alison Isenberg, author of Designing San Francisco: Art, Land, and Urban Renewal in the City by the Bay“Ryberg-Webster breaks new ground, offering a rare, fine-grained analysis of preservation practices that allows readers to appreciate how enduring policies and approaches emerged at the intersection of professional paradigms, political imperatives, and grassroots activism. She suggests a new way of envisioning historic preservation as something more versatile than that which is pursued by preservation professionals and more complicated than its portrayal in much scholarly literature as an agent of gentrification. Preserving the Vanishing City offers both a sober analysis of preservation’s limitations as well as its potential for revitalizing cities.”—Andrew Hurley, Professor of History at the University of Missouri–St. Louis, and author of Beyond Preservation: Using Public History to Revitalize Inner Cities (Temple)

    £81.90

  • Preserving the Vanishing City

    Temple University Press,U.S. Preserving the Vanishing City

    Book SynopsisPreserving the Vanishing Cityconsiders the unique challenges, conditions, and opportunities facing Cleveland’s historic preservation community during the 1970s and 1980s. While pro-preservationists argued for the economic and revitalization benefits stemming from saving and repurposing older buildings, population loss and economic contraction prompted decades ofdeterioration, underinvestment, vacancy, and abandonment. Stephanie Ryberg-Webster uncovers the motivations, strategies, and constraints driving Cleveland’s historic preservation sector, led by the public-sector Cleveland Landmarks Commission, nonprofit Cleveland Restoration Society, and a cadre of advocates. She sheds light on the ways in which preservationists confronted severe, escalating, and sustained urban decline, which plagued Cleveland, a prototypical rust-belt industrial city.Preserving the Vanishing Citychronicles the rise of the historic preservation profession in CleTrade Review“Ryberg-Webster offers a cogent examination of Cleveland’s historic preservation movement within the context of the city’s decline in both population and economic power. Preserving the Vanishing City chronicles the way preservationists, developers, planners, and residents balanced community priorities and determined what to save. Activists leveraged strategic coalitions, enacted policy changes, and designed innovative programs to preserve the places that tell the city’s story. Their struggles and successes, as recounted by the author, can inform the tactics and priorities of today’s preservationists—especially those working in legacy cities.”—Sara C. Bronin, Professor in the College of Architecture, Art, and Planning at Cornell University, and coauthor of Historic Preservation Law“Preserving the Vanishing City offers fresh strategies for shrinking cities by focusing on what preservation contributed to Cleveland’s revitalization efforts since the 1970s. Most preservation research has emphasized the profession’s origin cities, like New Orleans, Charleston, Boston, and Philadelphia, or centered cities facing overdevelopment and gentrification. More typical places like Cleveland have what Ryberg-Webster calls a ‘staggering oversupply of built things’ and a different set of challenges. Twentieth-century Cleveland led the nation in many trends, from 1930s public housing to 1960s community development. This history of preservation in cities experiencing deindustrialization and depopulation will be enormously useful to policy stakeholders and historians.”—Alison Isenberg, author of Designing San Francisco: Art, Land, and Urban Renewal in the City by the Bay“Ryberg-Webster breaks new ground, offering a rare, fine-grained analysis of preservation practices that allows readers to appreciate how enduring policies and approaches emerged at the intersection of professional paradigms, political imperatives, and grassroots activism. She suggests a new way of envisioning historic preservation as something more versatile than that which is pursued by preservation professionals and more complicated than its portrayal in much scholarly literature as an agent of gentrification. Preserving the Vanishing City offers both a sober analysis of preservation’s limitations as well as its potential for revitalizing cities.”—Andrew Hurley, Professor of History at the University of Missouri–St. Louis, and author of Beyond Preservation: Using Public History to Revitalize Inner Cities (Temple)

    £25.19

  • Building a Social Contract

    Temple University Press,U.S. Building a Social Contract

    Book SynopsisThe dream of the modern worker’s house emerged in early twentieth-century America as wage earners gained access to new, larger, and better-equipped dwellings. Building a Social Contract is a cogent history of the houses those workers dreamed of and labored for. Michael McCulloch chronicles the efforts of employers, government agencies, and the building industry who, along with workers themselves, produced an unprecedented boom in housing construction that peaked in the mid-1920s. Through oral histories, letters, photographs, and period fiction, McCulloch traces wage earners’ agency in negotiating a new implicit social contract, one that rewarded hard work with upward mobility in modern houses. This promise reflected workers’ increased bargaining power but, at the same time, left them increasingly vulnerable to layoffs.Building a Social Contract focuses on Detroit, the quintessential city of the era, where migrant workers came and

    £77.35

  • Building a Social Contract

    Temple University Press,U.S. Building a Social Contract

    Book SynopsisThe dream of the modern worker’s house emerged in early twentieth-century America as wage earners gained access to new, larger, and better-equipped dwellings. Building a Social Contract is a cogent history of the houses those workers dreamed of and labored for. Michael McCulloch chronicles the efforts of employers, government agencies, and the building industry who, along with workers themselves, produced an unprecedented boom in housing construction that peaked in the mid-1920s. Through oral histories, letters, photographs, and period fiction, McCulloch traces wage earners’ agency in negotiating a new implicit social contract, one that rewarded hard work with upward mobility in modern houses. This promise reflected workers’ increased bargaining power but, at the same time, left them increasingly vulnerable to layoffs.Building a Social Contract focuses on Detroit, the quintessential city of the era, where migrant workers came and

    £25.19

  • Changing Toronto

    University of Toronto Press Changing Toronto

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisWith an eye for global forces, this panoramic account revolves around a focus on social, spatial, and environmental justice in the city, offering a lively riposte to both dull academicism and theatrical boosterism. - Kanishka Goonewardena, University of TorontoTable of ContentsPreface List of Figures, Tables, and Maps Acknowledgements 1. Canada Urbana: Perspectives of Urban Research 2. The City That Works (No More): Towards the Crisis of the Mid-1990s 3. Tory Toronto: Neoliberalism in the City 4. Making the Megacity 5. Diverse-City 6. Official Planning 7. The In-between City 8. Urinetown or Morainetown? 9. Transportation Dilemmas 10. Creative Competitiveness 11. Millermania 12. Changing Toronto References Index

    1 in stock

    £26.99

  • Suburban Governance

    University of Toronto Press Suburban Governance

    Book SynopsisNorth American gated communities, African squatter settlements, European housing estates, and Chinese urban villages all share one thing in common: they represent types of suburban space. As suburban growth becomes the dominant urban process of the twenty-first century, its governance poses an increasingly pressing set of global challenges.In Suburban Governance: A Global View, editors Pierre Hamel and Roger Keil have assembled a groundbreaking set of essays by leading urban scholars that assess how governance regulates the creation of the world’s suburban spaces and everyday life within them. With contributors from ten countries on five continents, this collection covers the full breadth of contemporary developments in suburban governance. Examining the classic North American model of suburbia, contemporary alternatives in Europe and Latin America, and the emerging suburbanisms of Africa and Asia, Suburban Governance offers a strong analytical introduTrade Review'The authors of this book should be applauded for providing us with a volume that stimulates discussion on the meaning of the (sub) urban and governance in today's global (sub)urbanization.' -- Stijn Oosterlynck and Federico Savini International Journal of Urban and Regional Research October 2016 'I would advise anyone interested in understanding suburban processes in a global context to read this book.' -- Bernadette Hanlon Journal of Planning Education and Research vol 37:01:2017 'Many of the book's essays offer rewarding and provocative overviews of suburban development in particular countries and regions and deserve to be read by anyone interested in the diverse ways in which suburbanization is changing our world.' -- Andrew Sancton Canadian Journal of Urban Research vol 24:01:2015Table of ContentsIntroduction: Governance in a Suburban World (Pierre Hamel and Roger Keil) Section 1: Suburban Governance 1. Governing Suburbia: Modalities and Mechanisms of Suburban Governance (Michael Ekers, Pierre Hamel, and Roger Keil) 2. A Note on Governance: More Intervening Variables, Please (Robert Young) Section 2: Suburban Governance in the Classical Anglo-Saxon Cases 3. The United States: Suburban Imaginaries and Metropolitan Realities (Jan Nijman and Tom Clery) 4. Modalities of Suburban Governance in Canada (Roger Keil, Pierre Hamel, Elena Chou, and Kieran Williams) 5. Governing Suburban Australia (Louise C. Johnson) 6. Chicago-School Suburbanism (Jamie Peck) Section 3: The Existing Alternatives 7. Suburban Governance in Western Europe (Nicholas A. Phelps and Amparo Tarazona Vento) 8. Suburbia in Three Acts: The East European Story (Sonia Hirt and Atanas Kovachev) 9. Governing Shrinkage of Large Housing Estates at the Fringe (Sigrun Kabisch and Dieter Rink) 10. Suburbanization in Latin America: Towards New Authoritarian Modes of Governance at the Urban Margin (Dirk Heinrichs and Henning Nuissl) 11. On the Relations of Culture and Suburbia: How to Give Meaning to the Suburban Landscape? (Thomas Sieverts) Section 4: The Emerging Models 12. Africa's New Suburbs (Robin Bloch) 13. Shifting Terrain: Questions of Governance in India's Cities and Their Peripheries (Shubhra Gururani and Burak Kose) 14. Suburban Development and Governance in China (Fulong Wu and Jie Shen) 15. Deconstructing the Decentralized Urban Spaces of the Mega-Urban Regions in the Global South (Terry McGee) 16. Governing the Postcolonial Suburbs (Ananya Roy) Conclusion: Suburban Governance: Convergent and Divergent Dynamics (Roger Keil and Pierre Hamel)

    £28.80

  • Celebrating Canada

    University of Toronto Press Celebrating Canada

    Book SynopsisPopular and government-funded anniversaries and commemorations, combined with national symbols, play significant roles in shaping how we view Canada, and also provide opportunities for people to challenge the pre-existing or dominant conceptions of the country. Volume 2 of Celebrating Canada continues the scholarly debate about commemoration and national identity. Raymond B. Blake and Matthew Hayday bring together emerging and established scholars to consider key moments in Canadian history when major anniversaries of Canada’s political, social, or cultural development were celebrated. The contributors to this volume capture the multiple and multi-layered meanings of belonging in the Canadian experience, investigate various attempts at shaping and re-shaping identities, and explore episodes of groups resisting or participating in the identity-formation process. By considering the small voices and those on the margins of Canada’s many commemorative anniveTable of ContentsIntroduction Celebrating Canada: Commemorations, Anniversaries and National Symbols 1. National Symbols and Commemorations: Analyzing the Loyalist Centennial and the Conventions nationales acadiennes in New Brunswick in the 1880s Denis Bourque, Bonnie Huskins, Greg Marquis, and Chantal Richard 2. Emblemizing Canada in the "Flag Debate" of 1895 Peter Price 3. Children of a Common Mother: The Rise and Fall of the Anglo-American Peace Centenary Brandon Dimmel 4. Competing Pasts, Multiple Identities: The Diamond Jubilee of Confederation and the Politics of Commemoration Robert Cupido 5. Bilingualism and Biculturalism at the Diamond Jubilee of Confederation Robert J. Talbot 6. Canada’s Centennial Experience Helen Davies 7. A "labor of love in a community spirit": The Cape Breton Miners’ Museum and the Remaking of Historical Consciousness Meaghan Beaton 8. Federal Funding, Local Priorities: Urban Planning and Ontario’s Municipal Centennial Projects Christopher Los 9. Alternative Identities: The 1967 Centennial and the Campaign for a Better Canada Ted Cogan 10. Fit for Citizenship’: Scouting and the Centennial Celebrations of 1967 James Trepanier 11. A Continental Centennial: Situating Expo 67 within the Canadian-American Relationship Robyn E. Schwar 12. New Nationalism in the Cradle of Confederation: Prince Edward Island’s Centennial Decade Matthew McRae Conclusion

    £29.70

  • The Housing and Economic Experiences of

    University of Toronto Press The Housing and Economic Experiences of

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe Housing and Economic Experiences of Immigrants in U.S. and Canadian Cities is a collection of essays examining how recent immigrants have fared in getting access to jobs and housing in urban centres across the continent.Trade Review'This compilation is an example of how comparative research can further advance our knowledge and understanding of structural inequality in place making.' -- Regina Serpa Housing Studies vol 31:02:2016 'This book is an excellent resource to learn about past and current understandings of the processes through which immigrants integrate into the housing markets and economies of the cities in the US and Canada.' -- Craig E. Jones Canadian Journal of Urban Research vol 24:01:2015Table of ContentsPreface (Audrey Kobayashi) Introduction 1. The Housing and Economic Experiences of Immigrants in Canada and the United States (Wei Li and Carlos Teixeira) Part One: The Housing Experiences of Immigrants Introduction to Part One: The Housing Experiences of Immigrants (Carlos Teixeira) 2. Home Ownership among Immigrants in Canada and the United States: Similarities and Differences (Joe T. Darden) 3. Cohort Progress toward Household Formation and Homeownership: A Comparison of Immigrant Racialized Minority Groups in Canada and the United States (Michael Haan and Zhou Yu) 4. How Are Sri Lankan Tamils Doing in Toronto's Housing Markets? A Comparative Study of the Refugee Claimants and the Family Class Migrants (Sutama Ghosh) 5. A Two-Sided Question: The Negative and Positive Impacts of Gentrification on Portuguese Residents in West-Central Toronto (Robert A. Murdie and Carlos Teixeira) 6. The Good, the Bad and the Suburban: Tracing North American Theoretical Debates about Ethnic Enclaves, Ethnic Suburbs & Housing Preference (Virpal Kataure and Margaret Walton-Roberts) 7. Housing Experiences and Trajectories among Ethnoburban Chinese in Los Angeles: Achieving Chinese Immigrants' American Dream (Wan Yu) Part Two: The Economic Experiences of Immigrants Introduction to Part Two: Economic Experiences of Immigrants in Canada and the United States (John Miron) 8. The Colour of Money Redux: Immigrant/Ethnic Earnings Disparity in Canada 1991-2006 (Krishna Pendakur and Ravi Pendakur) 9. Immigrant Underemployment in the US Urban Labor Markets (Tetiana Lysenko and Qingfang Wang) 10. The Latino Commercial Landscape and Evolving Hispanic Immigrant Population in Two Midwestern Metropolitan Areas (Alex Oberle) 11. Immigrant Entrepreneurship in the Washington Metropolitan Area: Opportunities and Challenges Facing Ethnic Minorities (Elizabeth Chacko and Marie Price) 12. Financing Immigrant Small Businesses in the US and Canada (Wei Li and Lucia Lo) Conclusion 13. Immigrant Experiences and Integration Trajectories in North American Cities: An Overview and Commentary on Themes and Concepts (John W. Frazier)

    1 in stock

    £29.70

  • The National Mall

    University of Toronto Press The National Mall

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisIn The National Mall, Lisa Benton-Short explores the critical issues that are redefining and reshaping this extraordinary public space.Trade Review‘This is a valuable document in the development of a movement towards rationalization and reform of Mall governance.’ -- Don Alexander Hawkins * Washington History Spring 2017 *‘An excellent book on the National Mall’s history of failures and mismanagement… Benton-Short’s book is firmly rooted in social science scholarship, but it should be read by everyone interested in the past, present, and future of public spaces.’ -- Mark A Barron * H-FedHist July 2017 *Table of ContentsList of Tables List of Figures List of Plates Acknowledgements Introduction Chapter 1: From Grand Avenue to Public Space: A Brief History of the Mall Part I: Management Challenges Chapter 2: Neglecting the Mall Chapter 3: Managing the Mall Part II Use and Development Pressures Chapter 4: Making Space for the Dream Chapter 5: Brawl on the Mall Chapter 6: Securing the Mall Part III Planning and Public Participation Chapter 7: Whose Mall is It? Chapter 8: The Right to the Mall Chapter 9: Envisioning a 21st Century Mall Conclusion Notes and References

    2 in stock

    £26.09

  • Urbanism and the Changing Canadian Society

    University of Toronto Press Urbanism and the Changing Canadian Society

    Book SynopsisIn this collection of essays the changing structure of the Canadian community, especially in its urban growth, is brought before the reader with many fresh insights, much vigorous comment, and apt illustration. The authors, concentrating on certain kinds of problems which have interested them individually, provide for student and general reader stimulating analysis of social phenomena which are under lively examination these days in Canada and beyond both in popular and semi-popular journals and magazines and in learned writings.Nathan Keyfitz opens the volume with a valuable background analysis of the way in which the population of Canada has reached its present numbers and distribution and examines the effects of immigration and of changing rates of birth and death. S.D. Clark deals with the controversial question of what the real characteristics of the suburban community can be seen to be and comments forcefully on the 'suburbia' of Riesman, Whyte, et al. W.E. Mann present

    £19.79

  • Suburban Governance

    University of Toronto Press Suburban Governance

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisSuburban Governance: A Global View is a groundbreaking set of essays by leading urban scholars that assess how governance regulates the creation of the world's suburban spaces and everyday life within them.Trade Review'The authors of this book should be applauded for providing us with a volume that stimulates discussion on the meaning of the (sub) urban and governance in today's global (sub)urbanization.' -- Stijn Oosterlynck and Federico Savini International Journal of Urban and Regional Research October 2016 'I would advise anyone interested in understanding suburban processes in a global context to read this book.' -- Bernadette Hanlon Journal of Planning Education and Research vol 37:01:2017 'Many of the book's essays offer rewarding and provocative overviews of suburban development in particular countries and regions and deserve to be read by anyone interested in the diverse ways in which suburbanization is changing our world.' -- Andrew Sancton Canadian Journal of Urban Research vol 24:01:2015Table of ContentsIntroduction: Governance in a Suburban World (Pierre Hamel and Roger Keil) Section 1: Suburban Governance 1. Governing Suburbia: Modalities and Mechanisms of Suburban Governance (Michael Ekers, Pierre Hamel, and Roger Keil) 2. A Note on Governance: More Intervening Variables, Please (Robert Young) Section 2: Suburban Governance in the Classical Anglo-Saxon Cases 3. The United States: Suburban Imaginaries and Metropolitan Realities (Jan Nijman and Tom Clery) 4. Modalities of Suburban Governance in Canada (Roger Keil, Pierre Hamel, Elena Chou, and Kieran Williams) 5. Governing Suburban Australia (Louise C. Johnson) 6. Chicago-School Suburbanism (Jamie Peck) Section 3: The Existing Alternatives 7. Suburban Governance in Western Europe (Nicholas A. Phelps and Amparo Tarazona Vento) 8. Suburbia in Three Acts: The East European Story (Sonia Hirt and Atanas Kovachev) 9. Governing Shrinkage of Large Housing Estates at the Fringe (Sigrun Kabisch and Dieter Rink) 10. Suburbanization in Latin America: Towards New Authoritarian Modes of Governance at the Urban Margin (Dirk Heinrichs and Henning Nuissl) 11. On the Relations of Culture and Suburbia: How to Give Meaning to the Suburban Landscape? (Thomas Sieverts) Section 4: The Emerging Models 12. Africa's New Suburbs (Robin Bloch) 13. Shifting Terrain: Questions of Governance in India's Cities and Their Peripheries (Shubhra Gururani and Burak Kose) 14. Suburban Development and Governance in China (Fulong Wu and Jie Shen) 15. Deconstructing the Decentralized Urban Spaces of the Mega-Urban Regions in the Global South (Terry McGee) 16. Governing the Postcolonial Suburbs (Ananya Roy) Conclusion: Suburban Governance: Convergent and Divergent Dynamics (Roger Keil and Pierre Hamel)

    1 in stock

    £59.50

  • A Companion to Urban Anthropology

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd A Companion to Urban Anthropology

    Book SynopsisA Companion to Urban Anthropology presents a collection of original essays on central concepts in urban anthropology and ethnography. Featuring contributions from 35 leading international scholars in urban studies, readings cover a wide variety of topics central to the contemporary study of cities.Table of ContentsPreface viii Notes on Contributors x Introduction 1 Donald M. Nonini Part I Foundational Concepts: Affirmed and Contested 13 1 Spatialities 15 Setha M. Low 2 Flows 28 Gary W. McDonogh 3 Community 46 John Clarke 4 Citizenship 65 Sian Lazar Part II Materializations and Their Imaginaries 83 5 Built Structures and Planning 85 Deborah Pellow and Denise Lawrence-Zúñiga 6 Borders 103 Thomas M. Wilson 7 Markets 120 Linda J. Seligmann 8 Cars and Transport 142 Catherine Lutz Part III Dividing Processes, Bases of Solidarity 155 9 Class 157 Don Kalb 10 Gender 177 Ida Susser 11 Sexualities 193 Ara Wilson 12 Race 210 Brett Williams 13 Extralegality 222 Alan Smart and Filippo M. Zerilli Part IV Abstractions of Consequence 239 14 Global Systems and Globalization 241 Jonathan Friedman 15 Governance 255 Jeff Maskovsky and Julian Brash 16 Policing and Security 271 Josiah McC. Heyman 17 Transnationality 291 Nina Glick Schiller 18 Cosmopolitanism 306 Pnina Werbner Part V Experiencing/Knowing the City in Everyday Life 327 19 Practices of Sociality 329 José Guilherme Cantor Magnani 20 Memory and Narrative 347 Lindsay DuBois 21 Religion 364 Thomas Blom Hansen Part VI Nature and the City 381 22 Nature 383 Robert Rotenberg 23 Food and Farming 394 Donald M. Nonini 24 Pollution 414 Eveline Dürr and Rivke Jaffe 25 Resilience 428 Stephan Barthel Part VII Challenging the Present, Anticipating Urban Futures 447 26 The Commons 449 Maribel Casas-Cortés, Sebastian Cobarrubias, and John Pickles 27 Social Movements 470 Michal Osterweil 28 Futures 486 Hilary Cunningham and Stephen Bede Scharper Index 498

    £128.66

  • Readings in Urban Theory

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Readings in Urban Theory

    Book SynopsisUpdated with a majority of new readings, the Third Edition of Readings in Urban Theory expands its focus to present the most recent developments in urban and regional theories and policies in a globalized world. Around 75% of the readings included are new for thethird edition Unifies readings by an orientation toward political economy and normative themes of social justice Expands the focus on international planning, including globalization and theories of development Addresses the full range of core urban theory so as to remain the primary text in courses Table of ContentsAcknowledgments viii 1 Introduction: Theories of Urban Development and Their Implications for Policy and Planning 1 Susan S. Fainstein and Scott Campbell Part I The Changing Urban and Regional System 19 2 Regulation Theory, Post-Fordism and Urban Politics 23 Joe Painter 3 Neoliberalization and Democracy 42 Mark Purcell 4 The Global City: Strategic Site/New Frontier 55 Saskia Sassen 5 The Fifth Migration 73 Robert Fishman 6 Urban ‘Regions’ and Their Governance 90 Patsy Healey Part II Diversity: Race, Gender, Ethnicity and the Partitioning of Space 111 7 Cities and Diversity: Should we want it? Can we plan for it? 115 Susan S. Fainstein 8 Conceptualizing Recognition in Planning 129 Ruth Fincher and Kurt Iveson 9 Women’s Aspirations and the Home: Episodes in American Feminist Reform 147 Gwendolyn Wright 10 Is Multiculturalism Bad for Women? 161 Susan Moller Okin 11 Cities in Quarters 167 Peter Marcuse 12 Social Exclusion and Opportunity Structures in European Cities and Neighbourhoods 180 Alan Murie and Sako Musterd Part III Redevelopment and Urban Transformation 205 13 Partnership and the Pursuit of the Private City 207 Gregory D. Squires 14 Gentrification, the Frontier, and the Restructuring of Urban Space 229 Neil Smith 15 Promoting Tourism in US Cities 247 Dennis R. Judd Part IV Culture, Design, and Urban Form Introduction 271 16 The End(s) of Urban Design 273 Michael Sorkin 17 Changing Landscapes of Power: Opulence and the Urge for Authenticity 290 Sharon Zukin 18 The ‘Bilbao Effect’ 303 Donald McNeill 19 Connecting New Urbanism and American Planning: An Historical Interpretation 319 Emily Talen 20 Blurring the Boundaries: Public Space and Private Life 342 Margaret Crawford Part V Cities and Space in a Globalized World 353 21 Uneven Geographical Developments and Universal Rights 357 David Harvey 22 Transnationalism and Citizenship 377 Michael Peter Smith 23 Reflections on Place and Place-Making in the Cities of China 395 John Friedmann 24 The Economic Theory of the Developmental State 424 Ha-Joon Chang 25 The Prevalence of Slums 440 Mike Davis 26 Dangerous Spaces of Citizenship: Gang Talk, Rights Talk and Rule of Law in Brazil 460 James Holston Credit and Source Information 480 Index 484

    £28.45

  • Commodity Chains and World Cities

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Commodity Chains and World Cities

    Book Synopsis* Transnational spatial relations offer a key point from which to study the geographies of contemporary globalization. * This book assesses the possible cross-fertilization between two of the most notable analytical frameworks - the world city network framework and the global commodity chain framework.Trade Review"The Global Commodity Chain framework looks at the interconnected functions, operations, and transactions through which specific commodities are produced, distributed, and consumed. The purpose here is to assess the possible cross-fertilization of the two in order to strengthen the critique of conventional state-centric social science that both engage in separately. Contributors whose disciplines are not revealed - presumably economists and geographers like the editors - consider such topics as exploring the role of Mexico City in the geography of global economic governance, urban places in the system of chains, and intra-firm and extra-firm linkages in the knowledge economy as exemplified by the emerging mega-city where Munich once stood." (Reference and Research Book News, February 2011) Table of Contents1. World Cities and Global Commodity Chains: An introduction (Ben Derudder and Frank Witlox). 2. World City Networks and Global Commodity Chains: Towards a World-Systems' Integration (Ed Brown, Ben Derudder, Christof Parnreiter, Wim Pelupessy, Peter J. Taylor and Frank Witlox). 3. Global cities in Global Commodity Chains: Exploring the Role of Mexico City in the Geography of Global Economic Governance (Christof Parnreiter). 4. City Networks and Commodity Chains: Identifying Global Flows and Local Connections in Ho Chi Minh City (Ingeborg Vind and Niels Fold). 5. Cities, Material Flows and the Geography of Spatial Interaction: Urban Places in the System of Chains (Markus Hesse). 6. Integrating World Cities into Production Networks: The Case of Port Cities (Wouter Jacobs, Cesar Ducruet and Peter De Langen). 7. Intra-firm and Extra-firm Linkages in the Knowledge Economy: The Case of the Emerging Mega-city Region of Munich (Stefan Lüthi, Alain Thierstein and Viktor Goebel). 8. Making Connections: Global Production Networks and World City Networks (Neil M. Coe, Peter Dicken, Martin Hess and Henry Wai-Cheung Yeung). 9. Global Inter-city Networks and Commodity Chains: Any Intersections? (Saskia Sassen). Index.

    £19.71

  • The Creative Capital of Cities

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd The Creative Capital of Cities

    Book SynopsisThis book challenges the new urban growth concepts of the creative class and creative industries from a critical urban theory perspective. Critiques Richard Florida''s popular books about cities and the creative class Presents an alternative approach based on analyses of empirical research data concerning the German urban system and the case study regions, Hanover and Berlin Underscores that the culture industry takes a leading role in conforming with neoliberal conceptions of labor markets Table of ContentsIntroduction. 1. Creativity and innovation under the command of capital. The capitalist imperative of creativity and innovation. Generalizing models of urban economic development. The role of innovation and inter-urban competition in Harvey’s theory of capitalist urbanization. Conclusion. 2. Creative cities as a new urban growth ideology. The impact of creative occupations on regional economic success. Introduction. Critique of Florida’s conception of the creative class. An assessment of regional economic success factors and the impact of creative workers on regional development. The impact of creative occupational groups on regional economic development in Germany. Relationship between ‘qualities of place’ and the regional concentration of scientifically and technologically creative workers. Conclusion. 3. Innovation and knowledge networks in a metropolitan region. The impact of localization economies and networking on technological creativity. Introduction. Innovation and knowledge networks: Theoretical approaches. The application of network analysis to urban regions’ knowledge networks. Geographic scales and structural properties of knowledge networks in the metropolitan region of Hanover. Assessment of network impacts on regional firms’ innovation output. Conclusion. 4. Creativity in the culture and media industries. The impact of commercial imperatives on artistic creativity. Introduction. The institutional order of the cultural economy: Creativity in a capitalist context. Global centres of the culture industry and the production of lifestyle images. Conclusion. 5. Local clustering of the cultural economy in the metropolis of Berlin. The urbanization economies of artistically creative occupations. Introduction. The rise of the cultural economy in Berlin’s inner-city area. Creative cities and the role of the culture industries in urban economic and spatial development: Implications for urban regeneration. Conclusion. 6. Synthesis: The creative capital of cities. References. Appendix. Index.

    £54.00

  • The Creative Capital of Cities

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd The Creative Capital of Cities

    Book SynopsisThis book challenges the new urban growth concepts of the creative class and creative industries from a critical urban theory perspective. Critiques Richard Florida''s popular books about cities and the creative class Presents an alternative approach based on analyses of empirical research data concerning the German urban system and the case study regions, Hanover and Berlin Underscores that the culture industry takes a leading role in conforming with neoliberal conceptions of labor markets Trade Review"On the whole, The Creative Capital of Cities makes a valuable contribution to the urban economic literature. It provides a critical and quite comprehensive overview of a number of issues that have so far been left too much aside in the current debate." (J Hous and the Built Environ, 8 September 2012) Table of ContentsList of Illustrations vii Series Editors’ Preface x Introduction 1 1 Creativity and Innovation under the Command of Capital 12 The Capitalist Imperative of Creativity and Innovation 12 Generalizing Models of Urban Economic Development 18 The Role of Innovation and Interurban Competition in Harvey’s Theory of Capitalist Urbanization 24 Conclusion 34 2 Creative Cities as a New Urban Growth Ideology: The Impact of Creative Occupations on Regional Economic Success 37 Introduction 37 Critique of Florida’s Conception of the Creative Class 39 An Assessment of Regional Economic Success Factors and the Impact of Creative Workers on Regional Development 47 The Impact of Creative Occupational Groups on Regional Economic Development in Germany 52 Relationship between “Qualities of Place” and the Regional Concentration of Scientifically and Technologically Creative Workers 77 Conclusion 88 3 Innovation and Knowledge Networks in a Metropolitan Region: The Impact of Localization Economies and Networking on Technological Creativity 92 Introduction 92 Innovation and Knowledge Networks: Theoretical Approaches 97 The Application of Network Analysis to Urban Regions’ Knowledge Networks 104 Geographic Scales and Structural Properties of Knowledge Networks in the Metropolitan Region of Hanover 109 Assessment of Network Impacts on Regional Firms’ Innovation Output 121 Conclusion 125 4 Creativity in the Culture and Media Industries: The Impact of Commercial Imperatives on Artistic Creativity 128 Introduction 128 The Institutional Order of the Cultural Economy: Creativity in a Capitalist Context 131 Global Centers of the Culture Industry and the Production of Lifestyle Images 146 Conclusion 155 5 Local Clustering of the Cultural Economy in the Metropolis of Berlin: The Urbanization Economies of Artistically Creative Occupations 158 Introduction 158 The Rise of the Cultural Economy in Berlin’s Inner-City Area 163 Creative Cities and the Role of the Culture Industries in Urban Economic and Spatial Development: Implications for Urban Regeneration 183 Conclusion 191 6 Synthesis: The Creative Capital of Cities 194 Appendix: Grouping of Occupations and Subsectors 208 References 219 Index 234

    £18.99

  • Iron Curtains

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Iron Curtains

    Book SynopsisIron Curtains has been awarded Honorable Mention for the 2013 ASEEES Harvard Davis Center Book Prize! The prize is sponsored by Harvard University''s Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies and is awarded annually by the Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies, for an outstanding monograph published on Russia, Eurasia, or Eastern Europe in anthropology, political science, sociology, or geography. Utilizing research conducted primarily with residents of Sofia, Bulgaria, Iron Curtains: Gates, Suburbs, and Privatization of Space in the Post-socialist City explores the human dimension of new city-building that has emerged in East Europe. Features original data, illustrations, and theory on the process of privatization of resources in societies undergoing fundamental socio-economic transformations, such as those in Eastern Europe Represents the sole in-depth monograph on contemporary urbanism in Southeast Europe<Table of ContentsList of Illustrations and Tables viii Series Editors’ Preface xi Acknowledgements xii 1 Introduction 1 2 Public, Private, Privatism 14 3 The Post-socialist City 34 4 Post-modern Urbanism Revisited 60 5 Sofia: Wither the Socialist City 81 6 The Ninth Ring: Suburbanizing Sofia 105 7 Iron Curtains I: Gated Homes 131 8 Iron Curtains II: Gated Complexes 149 9 Architecture of Disunity 170 10 Possibilities 191 References 198 Index 220

    £18.99

  • Body Work in Health and Social Care

    John Wiley & Sons Inc Body Work in Health and Social Care

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe first book to fully explore the multiple ways in which body work features in health and social care and the meanings of this work both for those employed to do it and those on whose bodies they work. Explores the commonalities between different sectors of work, including those outside health and social care Contributions come from an international range of experts Draws on perspectives from across the medical, therapeutic, and care fields Incorporates a variety of methodological approaches, from life history analysis to ethnographic studies and first person accounts Table of ContentsNotes on Contributors vii 1 Conceptualising body work in health and social care 1 Julia Twigg, Carol Wolkowitz, Rachel Lara Cohen and Sarah Nettleton 2 Time, space and touch at work: body work and labour process (re)organisation 19 Rachel Lara Cohen 3 Managing the body work of home care 36 Kim England and Isabel Dyck 4 The means of correct training: embodied regulation in training for body work among mothers 50 Emma Wainwright, Elodie Marandet and Sadaf Rizvi 5 From body-talk to body-stories: body work in complementary and alternative medicine 67 Nicola Kay Gale 6 Educating with the hands: working on the body⁄self in Alexander Technique 81 Jennifer Tarr 7 Treating women’s sexual diffi culties: the body work of sexual therapy 94 Thea Cacchioni and Carol Wolkowitz 8 Actions speak louder than words: the embodiment of trust by healthcare professionals in gynae-oncology 108 Patrick R. Brown, Andy Alaszewski, Trish Swift and Andy Nordin 9 Body work in respiratory physiological examinations 123 Per Måseide 10 In a moment of mismatch: overseas doctors’ adjustments in new hospital environments 134 Anna Harris 11 The co-marking of aged bodies and migrant bodies: migrant workers’ contribution to geriatric medicine in the UK 147 Parvati Raghuram, Joanna Bornat and Leroi Henry 12 Afterword: Body work and the sociological tradition 162 Chris Shilling Index 167

    2 in stock

    £19.71

  • Leading the Inclusive City

    Bristol University Press Leading the Inclusive City

    Book SynopsisThis engaging book argues that imaginative place-based leadership can enable citizens to shape the urban future while advancing social justice, promoting care for the environment and bolstering community empowerment.Trade Review"This is a useful work for practitioners as well as academics, offering conceptual and instrumental insights that should stimulate cross-disciplinary dialogue." Choice"[This book] makes an important contribution to the planning discourse by calling for strong place-based leadership and highlighting... what can be achieved when civic leaders from local government to activist groups strive to make cities more liveable and inclusive." Town Planning Review"Robin Hambleton's Leading the Inclusive City: Place-Based Innovation for a Bounded Planet lays the groundwork for an important call to action." Journal of the American Planning Association"It is a timely re-formulation and consolidation of various strands in current thinking about places, and its optimistic signposting of a possible future makes it required reading." Local Economy"The book is well-structured and solution-oriented. It provides diagnosis and concepts with a wide array of figures and resources but also experiences of place-based leadership in action and lesson-drawing for practice from international ‘innovation stories’ (case studies). Examples provided are really interesting throughout, from the NYC high line showing how place-based activism can influence public policy decisions to the closure of the Cadbury factory in Somerdale as an example of poor placeless decisions resulting in local impacts. Highly recommended reading." 5* Review on Amazon"Raises important issues regarding the creation of more just and ecologically sensitive cities" - Journal of Planning Education and Research"This book bridges practice and academia and provides inspiration through exploring cases of urban innovation and leaders that co-created more inclusive cities together with local communities." Environment & Urbanization journal"this book is one which scholars will admire and politicians and policy-makers will not want to miss." Journal of Contemporary European Studies“One of the more interesting and helpful characteristics of the book is that it provides 17 ‘Innovation Stories’, drawn from cities across the world … the presentation of Innovation Stories proves useful in bridging ‘the worlds of academia and practice’.” Urban Research and Practice Journal"This book is an important read for those that want to engage with the coming devolution debates in the UK and indeed the debate of how urban environments across the globe should be governed." 5* review on Amazon from Mike Childs, Head of Policy, Friends of the EarthTable of ContentsPreface; A guide to the book; Innovation Stories; Overview; Place-based leadership and the inclusive city; Part 1 Diagnosis: Understanding trends and challenges; Global trends and our urban future; The changing nature of public service reform; Part 2 Concepts: Place, leadership, innovation and democratic governance; Understanding place and public policy; Place-based leadership; Leading public service innovation; Democratic urban governance; Part 3 Experiences: Place-based leadership in action; Leading the eco-city; Creating people-friendly cities; The diversity advantage; Part 4 Lesson drawing: Insights and international learning; From smart cities to wise cities; International lesson drawing;

    £75.99

  • Exploring the Production of Urban Space

    Bristol University Press Exploring the Production of Urban Space

    Book SynopsisThis important book engages critically with Lefebvre's spatial theories and challenges recent thinking about the nature of urban space. Research in three iconic post-industrial cities in the UK and North America, explains how urban public spaces, including differential space are socially produced.Trade Review"This book is a call to arms to begin applying and elaborating spatial theory to old and new situations, as well as valuing an archival approach to urban analysis." Town Planning Review"This volume is a thoughtful, meticulously researched, and empirically rich account of the character and counter-hegemonic potential of contemporary urban public space. Its strongly argued position on how we should understand space and difference in cities will, no doubt, inspire valuable debate among urbanists.” Eugene McCann, Department of Geography, Simon Fraser University, Canada"A terrific book that explores the production of urban space through case studies of three cities, which are brought to life in fascinating and meticulous detail and capture the transition from industrial to post-industrial urban space by drawing on the latest advancements in urban theory." John Roberts, Sociology and Communications, Brunel University LondonTable of ContentsIntroduction: Cities and public space; Vancouver: (Re)presenting urban space; Vancouver: Producing urban public space and city transformation; Lowell (Re)presenting urban space; Lowell: Producing urban public space and city transformation; Manchester (Re)presenting urban space; Manchester: Producing urban public space and city transformation; Venturing beyond Lefebvre: Producing differential space; Conclusions: Differential space implications.

    £75.99

  • The Short Guide to Urban Policy

    Bristol University Press The Short Guide to Urban Policy

    Book SynopsisThis text makes sense of the multiple ways in which urban issues and problems have been addressed in different places at different times. From initiatives that focus on social tensions within the urban realm, to those which seek to develop cities as economic entities, it provides an accessible discussion and critique of some key approaches.Trade Review"A staunchly critical and comprehensive primer on the political logics and dynamics of dominant urban policy forms. This excellent text is accessible and engaging, historically grounded and well resourced. A must-read for students of urban studies, urban governance and urban geography." Pauline McGuirk, The University of Newcastle, Australia"Engaging reading...chapters build on a variety of case studies, suggested recommeded readings and provide web links, which all provide useful resources for readers seeking to enter the urban policy field in the context of Western cities." Environment and Urbanization"An ideal introductory text: Comprehensive – covering an impressive array of topics – yet concise; sophisticated, yet decidedly accessible to undergraduates as well as reflective practitioners. An excellent primer for those on both sides of the Atlantic" David Imbroscio, University of Louisville, USA, author of Urban America Reconsidered"An engaging and wide-ranging introduction to urban policy, which highlights debates about the nature of the city and urban life, thoughtfully reflecting on possible urban futures and the policy implications associated with them." Allan Cochrane, The Open UniversityTable of ContentsIntroduction; The urban challenge; Understanding urban policy; Whose right to the city?; Privatisation and entrepreneurial urban policy; Community planning and partnership; Culture and the creative city; Urban renaissance and sustainable urban development; Urban recovery and the future for cities; Postscript; Keeping up to date.

    £14.99

  • Getting By

    Bristol University Press Getting By

    Book SynopsisLisa Mckenzie lived on the notorious St Ann's estate in Nottingham for more than 20 years. Her insider' status enables us to hear the stories of its residents, often wary of outsiders, to give a unique account of life in poor communities in contemporary Britain.Trade Review"The stories within this book lay bare what it means to be regarded as inferior and an outcast in your own society. This is a resolutely impressive book written with authenticity and passion." Mary O'Hara, journalist and author of Austerity Bites"[McKenzie] leads the reader to examine their own understanding of the working class by challenging the stigma attached to this identity and by representing this silenced community in modern Britain." BSA Network"McKenzie has managed to transform several academic pieces of work into a accessible book full of humanity and honesty about St Ann's and some of the people who live there." The Spokesman"This book challenges social scientists to think again about how working-class life on urban estates is portrayed, both academically and in the mainstream media." Social Policy & Administration"Lisa McKenzie did not try to paint an idyllic view of the council estate with its ethnic tensions across families that settled many generations ago. However her ethnography, which describes a mixed race community facing racism and endogamy from the middle classes, balances the narrow minded view that often associates lower classes with racism." [trans] lectures.revues.org"A very fine ethnography of life in austerity Britain, charting the resilience and creativity of the community it describes, as well as their injuries and mistreatment by others." John Holmwood, Professor of Sociology, University of Nottingham"As a child of St Ann’s and son of Jamaican immigrants, this is one of the most powerful celebrations of working-class and multi-cultural Britain I have ever read. I challenge you to read this book and not be ignited by a range of emotions such as sadness, anger, pleasure and joy. Read and enjoy. I did." Donald Mclean, Vice-Principal, Longley Park Sixth Form College"A vivid, passionate account of class, gender and race in a stigmatised and poor working-class community, and a powerful defence of its people. Essential reading for 21st century Britain." Andrew Sayer, Professor of Social Theory and Political Economy, Lancaster University and author of Why we can't afford the rich"This is one small example of a working class estate. But it tells the story of ordinary people as they see themselves, and in a corporate-dominated world that's worth something." Education for Tomorrow“Getting By is an essential antidote to media and governmental depictions of poverty in the UK today. McKenzie transports the reader into realities, rather than the stigmatised hype, of council estate life. This accessible and moving account of how people ‘get by’ in conditions of heightened poverty and inequality draws throughout on the powerful voices of working class people themselves.” Imogen Tyler, Lancaster University & author of Revolting Subjects: Social Abjection and Resistance in Neoliberal Britain"Who am I to pass comment on this book? But that's the trick they play on you isn't it. We are all used, processed, slashed, but the under class, the worker, well they are thoroughly abused." Jason Williamson, Sleaford Mods"The book excels in bringing to life the realities of life lived in hard circumstances and the ways in which people respond to troubling experiences and harsh lie conditions." Journal of Social Policy“A heart-wrenching, eminently readable, powerful book. This is class analysis at its most visceral and sensitive, uncovering incredibly resourceful survival strategies for staying human in conditions of incredible inhumanity." Bev Skeggs, Goldsmiths, University of London"A book that pulls no punches about its politics and commitment to challenging the anti-working class hatreds that are so prevalent in the UK today." Journal of Poverty and Social Justice"Getting By is a moving portrait of stigma and inequality which illuminates how the people of St Ann's navigate through the architecture, institutions and prestige systems of estate life, and shows, powerfully, why we must put value at the centre of class analysis." Dr Tracey Jensen, University of East LondonTable of ContentsForeword by Danny Dorling; Introduction; Being and belonging: the importance of narrative; ‘Being St Ann's’: an alternative value system; ‘Passing by’: family and community; ‘A little bit of sugar’: a discussion of taste; ‘The roof is on fire’: despair, fear and civil unrest; ‘On Road, don’t watch’; Conclusion; Afterword by Owen Jones

    £16.99

  • Regenerating Deprived Urban Areas

    Bristol University Press Regenerating Deprived Urban Areas

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis book compares the impacts of ABIs in two deprived urban areas in England and Germany on organisations and development actors at the neighbourhood level. It applies a mixed method approach to help the reader with a wider spectrum of illustrations and is aimed at those studying and working in the field of urban regeneration and planning.Trade Review"A well-structured and well-documented book, which analyses urban policies and local institutional framework in great detail and depth." Journal of Housing and the Built EnvironmentTable of ContentsIntroduction; New Localism(s) in Europe; Policies for deprived urban areas; Conceptualising New Localism(s): exploring local variations in urban governance practices across Europe; Lost in transformation: urban governance practices and the New Deal for Communities (NDC) in Bristol; Local government experiments to cope with structural change: The Social City Programme in Duisburg; The crystallization of New Localism(s) in Bristol and Duisburg: a cross-case comparison; The neo-institutional study of New Localism(s) as an analytical window for comparative urbanism: concluding reflections; Appendices.

    1 in stock

    £77.39

  • Resilience in the PostWelfare Inner City

    Bristol University Press Resilience in the PostWelfare Inner City

    Book SynopsisMoving beyond theoretical notions of resilience' this is the first book to offer a conceptual and empirical approach to exploring and comparing the process of resilience across service hubs' in three complex but different global inner-city regions: London, Los Angeles and Sydney.Trade Review"DeVerteuil demonstrates well the complex interplay of public, private and voluntary sectors across the three city regions studied and offers real insight around the varied strategies that have enabled VSOs' survival." Antipode"Makes a vital contribution to a wider search for a more realistic understanding of what is really happening on the ground of key urban governance and policy realms" - Voluntas“An insightful and theory-laden exposition of the challenges facing the voluntary sector in the 21st century… the appeal of this book goes beyond geographers to include those interested in welfare reforms, voluntary sector provision and the city as a contested arena.” The Voluntary Sector Review"The siege on the welfare state has destroyed most collective consumption institutions, yet voluntary organisations survive in the global city. DeVerteuil’s excellent analysis shows us how – and why it matters." Elvin Wyly, The University of British Columbia, CanadaTable of ContentsPart One: Introducing resilience in the post-welfare inner city: conceptual and methodological considerations; Introduction; Resilience and residualism; The voluntary sector within the post-welfare city; Part Two: Case studies: spatial and social resilience in London, Los Angeles and Sydney; National and local settlements: London, UK; Los Angeles, US; and Sydney, Australia; Established gentrified place-types; Mixed place-types; Pioneer gentrified place-types; Immigrant enclaves; Comparative analysis and summary; Part Three: Conclusions, critical resilience, commons and austerity; The critical resilience of the residuals; Here, now: recasting service hubs in an age of austerity.

    £28.49

  • Urban Environments in Africa

    Bristol University Press Urban Environments in Africa

    Book SynopsisExplores the impact of Africa's rapidly growing urban population on local resources and the environment, acknowledging the clash between Western focus on sustainable development and the lived realities of residents of often poor, informal settlements.Trade Review"A tour de force that opens up an entirely new terrain of scholarly research on urban Africa this book fills a variety of huge gaps in the existing literature" Martin Murray University of MichiganTable of ContentsIntroduction; The Experts: The ‘State’ of Urban Environments in Africa; The Past: The Urban Biogeography of (Post)Colonialism; The Artists: Using African Literature to Read Urban Environments; The Cityscape: Place-Names, Culture and Spirits; From the Grass Roots: Popular Understandings of Urban Environmental Issues in Africa; Conclusion: Re-Reading Urban Environments.

    £75.99

  • Urban Environments in Africa

    Bristol University Press Urban Environments in Africa

    Book SynopsisExplores the impact of Africa's rapidly growing urban population on local resources and the environment, acknowledging the clash between Western focus on sustainable development and the lived realities of residents of often poor, informal settlements.Trade Review"A tour de force that opens up an entirely new terrain of scholarly research on urban Africa this book fills a variety of huge gaps in the existing literature" Martin Murray University of MichiganTable of ContentsIntroduction; The Experts: The ‘State’ of Urban Environments in Africa; The Past: The Urban Biogeography of (Post)Colonialism; The Artists: Using African Literature to Read Urban Environments; The Cityscape: Place-Names, Culture and Spirits; From the Grass Roots: Popular Understandings of Urban Environmental Issues in Africa; Conclusion: Re-Reading Urban Environments.

    £26.59

  • After Urban Regeneration

    Bristol University Press After Urban Regeneration

    Book SynopsisFocusing on the history and theory of community in urban policy, and including a unique set of case studies that draw on artistic and cultural community work, After urban regeneration engages with debates on how urban policy has changed and continues to change following the financial crash of 2008Trade Review"An accessible piece of literature that will add to the knowledge of many academics in this field." Town Planning Review"A genuinely fresh, and admirably provocative, attempt to reshape the way we seek to understand the evolving urban policy agenda." Housing Studies"After Urban Regeneration an excellent book and it is very well crafted and organised. The chapters are critical in tone and characterised by incisive critiques of community and urban policy and practice. There is nothing like this on the market that examines the impact of localism on communities, and the diverse ways in which community groups are cultivating new knowledges and practices of self government." Professor Rob Imrie, Goldsmiths, University of London"This important contribution to the urban policy and regeneration literature is the first major text to critically examine urban policy in the UK since 2008, and proposes that we have entered a period of `post-regeneration’ in the UK. This contribution will be of use to academics, policy makers and communities alike." Andrew Tallon, University of the West of EnglandTable of ContentsIntroduction ~ Peter Matthews and Dave O’Brien; Section 1: After regeneration?; Urban Policy and Communities ~ Stuart Wilks-Heeg; Connecting community to the post-regeneration era ~ Peter Matthews and Dave O’Brien; When things fall apart ~ Sue Cohen and Morag McDermont; Section 2: Exploring Epistemologies; Microsolutions for Megaproblems: What works in urban regeneration policy? ~ Max Nathan; The work of art in the age of mechanical co-production. Steve Pool and Kate Pahl; There is no local here, love ~ Rebecca Bernstein, Antonia Layard, Martin Maudsley and Hilary Ramsden; Section 3: New places for communities; Forging Communities: the CAER Heritage Project and the dynamics of co-production ~ Clyde Ancarno, Oliver Davis and David Wyatt; Lessons from ‘The Vale’ – the role of hyperlocal media in shaping reputational geographies ~ David Harte; Contemporary Governance Discourse and Digital Media: Convergences, Prospects & Problems for the ‘Big Society’ Agenda ~ Chris Speed, Amadu Wurie Khan, Sharon Baurley and Martin Phillips; Section 4: new spaces for policy; Localism, neighbourhood planning and community control: the MapLocal pilot ~ Phil Jones, Antonia Layard, Colin Lorne, Chris Speed; Translation across borders: Exploring the use, relevance and impact of academic research in the policy process ~ Steve Connelly, Dave Vanderhoven, Catherine Durose, Liz Richardson and Peter Matthews; Conclusion ~ Dave O’Brien and Peter Matthews.

    £26.59

  • Affordable Housing in US Shrinking Cities

    Bristol University Press Affordable Housing in US Shrinking Cities

    Book SynopsisWith almost one in ten post-industrial US cities shrinking in recent years, this book looks at the reasons for the failure (and success) of affordable housing experiences in these cities, stressing the importance of siting affordable housing in areas that ensure more equitable urban revitalisation.Trade Review"Researchers, students and practitioners focusing on urban planning and housing policy issues will find this book fruitful" Lectures"In their analysis of five shrinking cities, the authors offer important lessons for institutionalizing more equitable planning processes and siting affordable housing to locate poorer residents in neighborhoods of opportunity." Dennis Keating, Professor of Urban Studies, Cleveland State UniversityTable of ContentsSocial Equity and Siting Affordable Housing in Shrinking Cities; Present-Day Detroit; Present-Day New Orleans; Present-Day Cleveland; Present-Day Pittsburgh; Present-Day Buffalo; Lessons Learned and Recommendations for Siting Affordable Housing.

    £26.99

  • Why Detroit Matters

    Bristol University Press Why Detroit Matters

    Book SynopsisThis edited book examines why what happens in Detroit matters for other cities around the world. Bridging academic and non-academic voices, contributions from many of the leading scholars on Detroit are joined by some of the city's most influential writers, planners, artists and activists.Trade Review“This is a most welcome addition to the growing body of literature that not only is bringing long overdue attention to Detroit but also seeks to provide much needed nuance and complexity to Manichean debates. Doucet challenges readers to dissect the conscious choices that led Detroit into and out of bankruptcy rather than accept what transpired as inevitable.” Journal of Urban Affairs"This is an important and unique book in the context of the future of cities globally. In considering Detroit as a symbol of aspects of post-industrial decline and regeneration, it gives voice to a range of normally excluded voices and narratives. It therefore provides a valuably rounded set of perspectives and visions which, together, help the reader to understand the forces that have shaped the city, and wider lessons for creating more inclusive cities." John McCarthy, Associate Professor, School of the Built Environment, Heriot Watt University, UKTable of ContentsIntroduction: Why Detroit Matters ~ Brian Doucet; Section I: Lessons from Detroit; Detroit’s Bankruptcy: Treating the symptom, not the cause ~ George Galster; Detroit in Bankruptcy: What are the Lessons to be Learned? ~ Reynolds Farley ; Between economic revival and social disruption: The redevelopment of Greater Downtown and the emergence of new socio-spatial Inequalities ~ René Kreichauf; A new urban medicine show: On the limits of blight remediation ~ Joshua Akers; Reshaping the gray spaces: Resident self-provisioning and urban form in Detroit ~ Kimberley Kinder; Preserving Detroit by preserving Its baseball history ~ Jason Roche; This is (not) Detroit: Projecting the future of Germany’s Ruhr region ~ Julia Sattler; Intermezzo I: ‘You may not know my Detroit’ ~ jessica Care moore; Section II: Practices from Detroit; Evolution of municipal government in Detroit ~ John Gallagher; Detroit’s emerging innovation in urban infrastructure: how liabilities become assets for energy, water, industry and informatics ~ Dan Kinkead; Visions In conflict: A city of possibilities ~ Sharon Howell and Richard Feldman; Reconstructing Detroit: the resilient city ~ Khalil Ligon; Reawakening culture among Detroit’s resident majority ~ Jessica Brooke Williams; Make sure you’re helping: Experts, solidarity and effective partnering with locals ~ Drew Philp; New Strategies DMC, takin’ it all back home: Lessons from Detroit for arts practices in the Netherlands ~ Friso Wiersum, Bart Witte and Niko Doulos; Intermezzo II: My Detroit ~ Tyree Guyton; Section III: Conversations from Detroit; Lowell Boileau, artist and founder of DetroitYES; Sandra Hines, Detroit Coalition Against Police Brutality; Malik Yakini, Detroit Black Community Food Security Network; Dan Carmody, Eastern Market Corporation; Jackie Victor, Avalon International Breads; Phil Cooley, Entrepreneur, owner of Slows Bar-B-Q and Ponyride; Wayne Curtis and Myrtle Thompson-Curtis, Feedom Freedom Farmers; Julia Putnam, Amanda Rosman and Marisol Teachworth, The James and Grace Lee Boggs School; Yusef Shakur, author and neighbourhood organizer; Grace Lee Boggs, activist; Conclusion: Detroit and the future of the city ~ Brian Doucet.

    £77.39

  • Why Detroit Matters

    Bristol University Press Why Detroit Matters

    Book SynopsisThis edited book examines why what happens in Detroit matters for other cities around the world. Bridging academic and non-academic voices, contributions from many of the leading scholars on Detroit are joined by some of the city's most influential writers, planners, artists and activists.Trade Review“This is a most welcome addition to the growing body of literature that not only is bringing long overdue attention to Detroit but also seeks to provide much needed nuance and complexity to Manichean debates. Doucet challenges readers to dissect the conscious choices that led Detroit into and out of bankruptcy rather than accept what transpired as inevitable.” Journal of Urban Affairs"This is an important and unique book in the context of the future of cities globally. In considering Detroit as a symbol of aspects of post-industrial decline and regeneration, it gives voice to a range of normally excluded voices and narratives. It therefore provides a valuably rounded set of perspectives and visions which, together, help the reader to understand the forces that have shaped the city, and wider lessons for creating more inclusive cities." John McCarthy, Associate Professor, School of the Built Environment, Heriot Watt University, UKTable of ContentsIntroduction: Why Detroit Matters ~ Brian Doucet; Section I: Lessons from Detroit; Detroit’s Bankruptcy: Treating the symptom, not the cause ~ George Galster; Detroit in Bankruptcy: What are the Lessons to be Learned? ~ Reynolds Farley ; Between economic revival and social disruption: The redevelopment of Greater Downtown and the emergence of new socio-spatial Inequalities ~ René Kreichauf; A new urban medicine show: On the limits of blight remediation ~ Joshua Akers; Reshaping the gray spaces: Resident self-provisioning and urban form in Detroit ~ Kimberley Kinder; Preserving Detroit by preserving Its baseball history ~ Jason Roche; This is (not) Detroit: Projecting the future of Germany’s Ruhr region ~ Julia Sattler; Intermezzo I: ‘You may not know my Detroit’ ~ jessica Care moore; Section II: Practices from Detroit; Evolution of municipal government in Detroit ~ John Gallagher; Detroit’s emerging innovation in urban infrastructure: how liabilities become assets for energy, water, industry and informatics ~ Dan Kinkead; Visions In conflict: A city of possibilities ~ Sharon Howell and Richard Feldman; Reconstructing Detroit: the resilient city ~ Khalil Ligon; Reawakening culture among Detroit’s resident majority ~ Jessica Brooke Williams; Make sure you’re helping: Experts, solidarity and effective partnering with locals ~ Drew Philp; New Strategies DMC, takin’ it all back home: Lessons from Detroit for arts practices in the Netherlands ~ Friso Wiersum, Bart Witte and Niko Doulos; Intermezzo II: My Detroit ~ Tyree Guyton; Section III: Conversations from Detroit; Lowell Boileau, artist and founder of DetroitYES; Sandra Hines, Detroit Coalition Against Police Brutality; Malik Yakini, Detroit Black Community Food Security Network; Dan Carmody, Eastern Market Corporation; Jackie Victor, Avalon International Breads; Phil Cooley, Entrepreneur, owner of Slows Bar-B-Q and Ponyride; Wayne Curtis and Myrtle Thompson-Curtis, Feedom Freedom Farmers; Julia Putnam, Amanda Rosman and Marisol Teachworth, The James and Grace Lee Boggs School; Yusef Shakur, author and neighbourhood organizer; Grace Lee Boggs, activist; Conclusion: Detroit and the future of the city ~ Brian Doucet.

    £27.54

  • AgeFriendly Cities and Communities

    Bristol University Press AgeFriendly Cities and Communities

    Book SynopsisThis important book provides a comprehensive survey of different strategies for developing age-friendly communities, and the extent to which older people themselves can be involved in the co-production of age-friendly policies and practices.Trade Review"An invaluable resource for anybody interested in the global age-friendly movement and a clear and insightful agenda for future action." Alana Officer, responsible for the World Health Organization’s Global Network for Age-friendly Cities and Communities"Useful for second and third year undergraduates and especially in modules with international context and a focus on older citizens. A welcome addition to our curriculum." Paul Simpson, Edgehill University“This important new collection should be read by planners, place makers, gerontologists and urban sociologists, everyone, in short, who is concerned with urban areas and how they might respond to demographic change. (It is) a fresh politicised approach to the AFC discussion… this book offers inspiration to those looking to understand and implement change in the complexity of the city.” International Journal of Housing PolicyTable of ContentsPart One:Age-friendly cities and communities; background, theory and development Introduction ~ Tine Buffel, Sophie Handler and Chris Phillipson; The development of age-friendly cities and communities ~ Samuèle Rémillard-Boilard; Neighbourhood change, social inequalities and age-friendly communities ~ Fleur Thomése,Tine Buffel and Chris Phillipson; Addressing erasure, microfication and social change: age-friendly initiatives and environmental gerontology in the 21st century ~ Jessica A. Kelley, Dale Dannefer and Luma Issa Al Masarweh; Part Two: Case studies from Europe, Asia and Australia; Age and gentrification in Berlin: urban ageing policy and the experiences of disadvantaged older people ~ Meredith Dale, Josefine Heusinger and Birgit Wolter; Towards an “active caring community” in Brussels ~ An-Sofie Smetcoren, Liesbeth De Donder, Daan Duppen, Nico De Witte, Olivia Vanmechelen and Dominique Verté; Exploring the age-friendliness of Hong Kong: opportunities, initiatives and challenges in an ageing Asian city ~ David Phillips, Jean Woo, Francis Cheung, Moses Wong and Pui Hing Chau; Creating an age-friendly county in Ireland: stakeholders' perspectives on implementation ~ Bernard McDonald, Thomas Scharf and Kieran Walsh; Implementing age-friendly cities in Australia ~ Hal Kendig, Cathy Gong and Lisa Cannon; Part Three: Age-friendly policies, urban design and a manifesto for change; From representation to active ageing in a Manchester neighbourhood: designing the age-friendly city ~ Stefan White and Mark Hammond; Alternative age-friendly initiatives: redefining age-friendly design ~ Sophie Handler; Developing age-friendly policies for cities: strategies, challenges and reflections ~ Paul McGarry; The age-friendly community: a test for inclusivity ~ Sheila Peace, Jeanne Katz, Caroline Holland and Rebecca L. Jones; Age-friendly cities and communities: a manifesto for change ~ Tine Buffel, Sophie Handler and Chris Phillipson.

    £77.39

  • AgeFriendly Cities and Communities

    Bristol University Press AgeFriendly Cities and Communities

    Book SynopsisThis important book provides a comprehensive survey of different strategies for developing age-friendly communities, and the extent to which older people themselves can be involved in the co-production of age-friendly policies and practices.Trade Review“This important new collection should be read by planners, place makers, gerontologists and urban sociologists, everyone, in short, who is concerned with urban areas and how they might respond to demographic change. (It is) a fresh politicised approach to the AFC discussion… this book offers inspiration to those looking to understand and implement change in the complexity of the city.” International Journal of Housing PolicyTable of ContentsPart One:Age-friendly cities and communities; background, theory and development Introduction ~ Tine Buffel, Sophie Handler and Chris Phillipson; The development of age-friendly cities and communities ~ Samuèle Rémillard-Boilard; Neighbourhood change, social inequalities and age-friendly communities ~ Fleur Thomése,Tine Buffel and Chris Phillipson; Addressing erasure, microfication and social change: age-friendly initiatives and environmental gerontology in the 21st century ~ Jessica A. Kelley, Dale Dannefer and Luma Issa Al Masarweh; Part Two: Case studies from Europe, Asia and Australia; Age and gentrification in Berlin: urban ageing policy and the experiences of disadvantaged older people ~ Meredith Dale, Josefine Heusinger and Birgit Wolter; Towards an “active caring community” in Brussels ~ An-Sofie Smetcoren, Liesbeth De Donder, Daan Duppen, Nico De Witte, Olivia Vanmechelen and Dominique Verté; Exploring the age-friendliness of Hong Kong: opportunities, initiatives and challenges in an ageing Asian city ~ David Phillips, Jean Woo, Francis Cheung, Moses Wong and Pui Hing Chau; Creating an age-friendly county in Ireland: stakeholders' perspectives on implementation ~ Bernard McDonald, Thomas Scharf and Kieran Walsh; Implementing age-friendly cities in Australia ~ Hal Kendig, Cathy Gong and Lisa Cannon; Part Three: Age-friendly policies, urban design and a manifesto for change; From representation to active ageing in a Manchester neighbourhood: designing the age-friendly city ~ Stefan White and Mark Hammond; Alternative age-friendly initiatives: redefining age-friendly design ~ Sophie Handler; Developing age-friendly policies for cities: strategies, challenges and reflections ~ Paul McGarry; The age-friendly community: a test for inclusivity ~ Sheila Peace, Jeanne Katz, Caroline Holland and Rebecca L. Jones; Age-friendly cities and communities: a manifesto for change ~ Tine Buffel, Sophie Handler and Chris Phillipson.

    £28.49

  • The Right to Buy

    Bristol University Press The Right to Buy

    Book SynopsisIn The Right to Buy, Alan Murie provides an authoritative account of the origins, development and impact of the policy across the UK and proposals for its extension in England (and decisions to end it in Scotland and Wales).Trade Review"In the context of fast-moving change, [this] book provides a welcome and objective policy analysis." LSE Review of Books"Alan Murie is the UK expert on the Right to Buy. He provides an in-depth and accessible assessment of the policy, its past, present and future, informed not least by his work in this area over the last 35 years." Peter Williams, University of Cambridge"Students and policy makers alike will enjoy this concise and research based review of one of the most widely discussed housing policies of the past 50 years from the leading author on the topic." David Mullins, University of Birmingham“Professor Alan Murie’s latest book on the right to buy has the hallmarks of someone who has been studying the subject for a long time and knows it to a very fine level of detail, but who is still able to offer new insights and perspectives.” People, Place and PolicyTable of ContentsIntroduction; Selling public housing: Precursors and preconditions; The Right to Buy 1980-2015; Right to Buy: Statistics and impact; A policy commentary; The next phase: Extending the right to buy in England; Conclusions: The right to buy and beyond.

    £11.99

  • Reimagining Contested Communities

    Policy Press Reimagining Contested Communities

    Book SynopsisUsing history, artistic practice, writing, poetry, autobiography and collaborative ethnography, this book literally and figuratively re-imagines a place, presenting a `how to’ for researchers interested in community collaborative research and accessing alternative ways of knowing and voices in marginalised communities.Trade Review"These community stories and voices highlight the power of storytelling and narrative as a research methodology and method. This book will be of great interest, I believe, to academics, community practitioners and organizers, social justice advocates, policy makers, students at all levels, artists, humanists, and others." Theodore Alter, Co-Director of the Centre for Economic and Community Development, The Pennsylvania State UniversityTable of ContentsPart One: Introductions; What kind of book is this? ~ Elizabeth Campbell; Policy, practice and racism: social cohesion in action ~ Zanib Rasool; Part Two: Community histories; Introducing Rotherham ~ Kate Pahl and Miles Crompton; How can historical knowledge help us to make sense of communities like Rotherham? ~ Elizabeth Pente and Paul Ward; Some poems, a song and a prose piece ~ Ray Hearne and Ryan Bramley; Who are we now? Local history, industrial decline and ethnic diversity ~ Elizabeth Pente and Paul Ward; Silk and steel ~ Shahin Shah; History and co-production in the home: documents, artefacts and migrant identities in Rotherham ~ William Gould and Mariam Shah; Tassibee: a case study ~ Khalida Luqman; Identity ~ Zanib Rasool; Part Three: Community ways of knowing; Methodology: an introduction ~ Elizabeth Campbell; Collaborative ethnography in context ~ Elizabeth Campbell, Luke Eric Lassiter and Kate Pahl; Safe spaces and community activism ~ Zanib Rasool; Emotions in community research ~ Zanib Rasool; What parents know: a call for realistic accounts of parenting young children ~ Tanya Evans, Abigail Hackett, Joanna Magagula and Steve Pool; Where I come from and where I’m going to: exploring identity, hopes and futures with Roma girls in Rotherham ~ Deborah Bullivant; Introduction to artistic methods for understanding contested communities ~ Kate Pahl and Steve Pool with Marcus Hurcombe; What can art do? Artistic approaches to community experiences ~ Zahir Rafiq in conversation with Kate Pahl and Steve Pool; Using poetry to engage the voices of women and girls in research ~ Zanib Rasool; The Tassibee `Skin and Spirit’ project ~ Cassie Limb; `The Rotherham project’: young men represent themselves and their town ~ Nathan Gibson with Zanib Rasool and Kate Pahl; Part Four: Communities going forward; Re-imagining contested communities: implications for policy research ~ Robert Rutherfoord and Maria O’Beirne; What this book can teach us ~ Elizabeth Campbell, Kate Pahl, Elizabeth Pente and Zanib Rasool.

    £77.39

  • Reimagining Contested Communities

    Bristol University Press Reimagining Contested Communities

    Book SynopsisUsing history, artistic practice, writing, poetry, autobiography and collaborative ethnography, this book literally and figuratively re-imagines a place, presenting a ‘how to’ for researchers interested in community collaborative research and accessing alternative ways of knowing and voices in marginalised communities.Trade Review"These community stories and voices highlight the power of storytelling and narrative as a research methodology and method. This book will be of great interest, I believe, to academics, community practitioners and organizers, social justice advocates, policy makers, students at all levels, artists, humanists, and others." Theodore Alter, Co-Director of the Centre for Economic and Community Development, The Pennsylvania State UniversityTable of ContentsPart One: Introductions; What kind of book is this? ~ Elizabeth Campbell; Policy, practice and racism: social cohesion in action ~ Zanib Rasool; Part Two: Community histories; Introducing Rotherham ~ Kate Pahl and Miles Crompton; How can historical knowledge help us to make sense of communities like Rotherham? ~ Elizabeth Pente and Paul Ward; Some poems, a song and a prose piece ~ Ray Hearne and Ryan Bramley; Who are we now? Local history, industrial decline and ethnic diversity ~ Elizabeth Pente and Paul Ward; Silk and steel ~ Shahin Shah; History and co-production in the home: documents, artefacts and migrant identities in Rotherham ~ William Gould and Mariam Shah; Tassibee: a case study ~ Khalida Luqman; Identity ~ Zanib Rasool; Part Three: Community ways of knowing; Methodology: an introduction ~ Elizabeth Campbell; Collaborative ethnography in context ~ Elizabeth Campbell, Luke Eric Lassiter and Kate Pahl; Safe spaces and community activism ~ Zanib Rasool; Emotions in community research ~ Zanib Rasool; What parents know: a call for realistic accounts of parenting young children ~ Tanya Evans, Abigail Hackett, Joanna Magagula and Steve Pool; Where I come from and where I’m going to: exploring identity, hopes and futures with Roma girls in Rotherham ~ Deborah Bullivant; Introduction to artistic methods for understanding contested communities ~ Kate Pahl and Steve Pool with Marcus Hurcombe; What can art do? Artistic approaches to community experiences ~ Zahir Rafiq in conversation with Kate Pahl and Steve Pool; Using poetry to engage the voices of women and girls in research ~ Zanib Rasool; The Tassibee ‘Skin and Spirit’ project ~ Cassie Limb; ‘The Rotherham project’: young men represent themselves and their town ~ Nathan Gibson with Zanib Rasool and Kate Pahl; Part Four: Communities going forward; Re-imagining contested communities: implications for policy research ~ Robert Rutherfoord and Maria O’Beirne; What this book can teach us ~ Elizabeth Campbell, Kate Pahl, Elizabeth Pente and Zanib Rasool.

    £34.19

  • Young Muslim and Criminal

    Policy Press Young Muslim and Criminal

    Book SynopsisQasim gained unique first-hand insight into the multifaceted lives of a group of young British male Muslims who offend after spending 4 years studying them. He unwraps their lives, explores their identities and explains what role religion and Pakistani culture play in their criminal behaviour.Trade Review“Sheds light on a community of young men who are under-researched but overexposed as suspicious, deviant, and dangerous…provides a unique insight into a group of young Pakistani-British Muslim men involved in offending and makes a significant contribution to academic, and potentially, public understanding of their experiences.“ Martina Feilzer, Bangor University"A book of great importance to the field of criminology. It explores the rapidly emerging academic, political and media construction of a crime `problem’ amongst young Pakistani men in a dynamic, innovative and `real’ way. A must read for anyone seeking to understand the lived experiences of this much-neglected social group." Stephen Case, Loughborough University"A fascinating read, providing a close up, rare insight, into a group of people few are able to gain access and fully understand." Colin Webster, Leeds Beckett UniversityTable of ContentsYoung British Pakistani Muslim men and concern with increased levels of criminality; Bradford is home turf, it's our city; The Boys, their identities and dynamics; 'We are hustlers' – relationship with drugs; Prison talk – The Boys and their experiences of `inside’; The impact of Pakistani culture and Islamic faith on the lives of The Boys; Findings and conclusions.

    £77.39

  • Young Muslim and Criminal

    Policy Press Young Muslim and Criminal

    Book SynopsisQasim gained unique first-hand insight into the multifaceted lives of a group of young British male Muslims who offend after spending 4 years studying them. He unwraps their lives, explores their identities and explains what role religion and Pakistani culture play in their criminal behaviour.Trade Review“Sheds light on a community of young men who are under-researched but overexposed as suspicious, deviant, and dangerous…provides a unique insight into a group of young Pakistani-British Muslim men involved in offending and makes a significant contribution to academic, and potentially, public understanding of their experiences.“ Martina Feilzer, Bangor University"A book of great importance to the field of criminology. It explores the rapidly emerging academic, political and media construction of a crime `problem’ amongst young Pakistani men in a dynamic, innovative and `real’ way. A must read for anyone seeking to understand the lived experiences of this much-neglected social group." Stephen Case, Loughborough University"A fascinating read, providing a close up, rare insight, into a group of people few are able to gain access and fully understand." Colin Webster, Leeds Beckett UniversityTable of ContentsYoung British Pakistani Muslim men and concern with increased levels of criminality; Bradford is home turf, it's our city; The Boys, their identities and dynamics; 'We are hustlers' – relationship with drugs; Prison talk – The Boys and their experiences of `inside’; The impact of Pakistani culture and Islamic faith on the lives of The Boys; Findings and conclusions.

    £25.64

  • Communities Archives and New Collaborative

    Policy Press Communities Archives and New Collaborative

    Book SynopsisUsing a wide range of case studies, this edited collection shows how community engagement and co-creation is challenging and extending the notion of the archive.Trade Review"A testament to the vibrancy, depth, and diversity of collaborative research practices involving archives and archiving in the UK. It examines the challenges of collaboration, but even handedly celebrates the many benefits afforded by such modes of work." Richard Clay, Newcastle UniversityTable of ContentsPreface; Introductory Chapter: Remaking the Archive; Section 1: Storytelling, Co-curation and Community Archives; Chapter 1: New Island Stories: Heritage, Archives and the Digital Environment as a basis for Community Regeneration; Chapter 2: Speaking through Making: living archives, embodied value; Chapter 3: BBC Pebble Mill: Issues around collaborative community online archives – A case study of the http://pebblemill.org project; Chapter 4: Memories on film: Public archive images and participatory film?making with people with dementia; Chapter 5: Doing-It-Together: Co-creating popular music history in the online environment; Section 2: Citizen Archives and the Institution; Chapter 6: Museums and Communities in the Virtual Age: From Museological Use to Digital Heritage Engagement?; Chapter 7: Enhancing museum visits through the creation of data visualisation to support informed choices and the recording and sharing of experience; Chapter 8: Letter to an Unknown Soldier; Chapter 9: Earth in Vision and the Digital Citizen: Working Upstream of Digital and Broadcast Archive Developments; Chapter 10: Institutional collaboration in the creation of digital linguistic resources: the case of the British Telecom Correspondence Corpus; Chapter 11: Archiving art school atmosphere: digital collecting, cultural heritage practice and non-materiality; Section 3: Disruptive and Counter Voices: The Community Turn; Chapter 12: Anti-Institutional Mental Health Archives: Tensions, Challenges and Reward.; Chapter 13: ‘Weapons in the struggle’ Independent radical archives.; Chapter 14: Silver hair, silver tongues, silver screen: recollection, reflection and representation through digital storytelling with older people; Chapter 15: Prejudice and Pride: Archiving ‘wibbly-wobbly timey-wimey’ LGBT histories; Chapter 16: Locating the Black Archive; Chapter 17: Archive, Museum, Library, In/tangible Heritage, Web: Ways of being inclusive and alive.; Chapter 18: Archive Utopias: Linking collaborative histories to local decision-making; Concluding Chapter: The Archive in a World of Datafication.

    £75.99

  • Communities Archives and New Collaborative

    Bristol University Press Communities Archives and New Collaborative

    Book SynopsisUsing a wide range of case studies, this edited collection shows how community engagement and co-creation is challenging and extending the notion of the archive.Trade Review"A testament to the vibrancy, depth, and diversity of collaborative research practices involving archives and archiving in the UK. It examines the challenges of collaboration, but even handedly celebrates the many benefits afforded by such modes of work." Richard Clay, Newcastle UniversityTable of ContentsCommunity archives and the creation of living knowledge ~ Simon Popple, Daniel H. Mutibwa and Andrew Prescott Disorderly conduct: the community in the archive ~ Simon Popple PART I: Storytelling, co-curation and community archives BBC Pebble Mill: issues around collaborative community online archives – a case study of the Pebble Mill Project ~ Vanessa Jackson New island stories: heritage, archives, the digital environment and community regeneration ~ Paul R.J. Duffy Memories on film: public archive images and participatory film-making with people with dementia ~ Andrea Capstick and Katherine Ludwin Doing-It-Together: citizen archivists and the online environment ~ Jez Collins ‘I’ve never told anybody that before’: the virtual archive and collaborative spaces of knowledge production ~ Tom Jackson PART II: Citizens, archives and the institution Rising beyond museological practice and use: a model for community and museum partnerships working towards modern curatorship in this day and age ~ Daniel H. Mutibwa Enhancing museum visits through the creation of data visualisation to support the recording and sharing of experience ~ Ian Gwilt, Patrick McEntaggart, Melanie Levick-Parkin and Jonathan Wood The digital citizen: working upstream of digital and broadcast archive developments ~ Kim Hammond, George Revill and Joe Smith Institutional collaboration in the creation of digital linguistic resources: the case of the British Telecom correspondence corpus ~ Ralph Morton and Hilary Nesi PART III: Disruptive and counter voices: the community turn Mainstream institutional collecting of anti-institutional archives: opportunities and challenges ~ Anna Sexton Silver hair, silver tongues, silver screen: recollection, reflection and representation through digital storytelling with older people ~ Tricia Jenkins and Pip Hardy ‘Wibbly-wobbly timey-wimey’ LGBT histories: community 195 archives as boundary objects ~ Niamh Moore Locating the Black archive ~ Hannah Ishmael, Ego Ahaiwe Sowinski, Kelly Foster, Etienne Joseph and Nathan E. Richards The public and the relational: the collaborative practices of the Inclusive Archive of Learning Disability History ~ Helen Graham, Victoria Green, Kassie Headon, Nigel Ingham, Sue Ledger, Andy Minnion, Row Richards and Liz Tilley Archive utopias: linking collaborative histories to local democracy ~ Lianne Brigham, Richard Brigham, Helen Graham and Victoria Hoyle Community archives and the health of the internet ~ Andrew Prescott

    £30.39

  • Planning and Knowledge

    Policy Press Planning and Knowledge

    Book SynopsisThis book uses an international perspective to look at the sources of conflict and cooperation between the different landscapes of knowledge driving contemporary urban change, and the rise of new technocracy in urban governance.Trade Review"Planning and Knowledge is an important contribution to the understanding of contemporary politics and urban development. It highlights the dilemmas of an urban world that appears to be increasingly in the hands of technocrats seeking to depoliticise policy and practice". Rob Imrie, Goldsmiths, University of LondonTable of ContentsPart I: Conceptual framings of technocracy The rise of a new urban technocracy ~ Federico Savini and Mike Raco Planning, knowledge and technocracy in historical perspective ~ Michael Hebbert Part II: Public planning and bureaucracies in contemporary urban development politics Dealing with tensions: the expertise of boundary spanners in facilitating community initiatives ~ Ward Rauws and Martine de Jong Plurality of expert knowledge: public planners' experience with urban contractulism in Amsterdam ~ Tuna Tasan-Kok & Martijn van den Hurk Local government in the face of crisis: changing public management of urban projects in Amsterdam ~ Thijs Koolmees and Stan Majoor Captured by bureaucracy: street-level professionals mediating past, present and future knowledge ~ Nanke Verloo Part III: Corporate knowledge and the land and property development sector Anticipatory knowledge: how development consultants see the future ~ Rachel Weber Towards an `information technocracy’: discourses of London’s post-referendum real estate markets ~ Nicola Livingstone Finance as technocratic agent in urban development ~ Sabine Dörry Planning professionalism in the face of technocracy: ethics, values and practices ~ Susannah Gunn Part IV: private consultants and the delivery of public policy Professional lobbying in urban planning: depoliticization or REpoliticization? ~ Aino Hirvola and Raine Mäntysalo Advocates, advisors and scrutineers: the technocracies of private sector planning in England ~ Gavin Parker, Emma Street and Matthew Wargent Localism and the reconfiguration of planning’s publics in the landscapes of technocrac ~ Sue Brownill The politics of new urban professions: the case of urban development engineers ~ Jonathan Metzger and Sherif Zakhour Part V: New constellations of actors and the management and governance of contemporary cities Smart cities, algorithmic technocracy and new urban technocrats ~ Rob Kitchin, Claudio Coletta, Leighton Evans, Liam Heaphy and Darach Mac Donncha Planning by numbers: affordable housing and viability in England ~ Antonya Layard Transnational design and local implications for planning: project flights and landings ~ Davide Ponzini Researching the best-practice: academic knowledge production, planning and the post-politicisation of environmental politics ~ Samuel Mössner and Catarina Gomes de Matos Conclusions: The technocratic logics of contemporary planning ~ Federico Savini and Mike Raco

    £75.99

  • Social Housing Wellbeing and Welfare

    Bristol University Press Social Housing Wellbeing and Welfare

    Book SynopsisBridging housing studies and social policy, this book analyses competing interpretations of the role and value of social housing in the UK. The author provides new research on the relationship between housing and wellbeing, and challenges the pervasive policy and social consensus that owner-occupation is the ‘natural’ choice of aspiring people.Table of Contents1. Introduction: housing, wellbeing and welfare PART I Meaning and purpose: discourses of social housing 2. Wellbeing: meaning and measurement 3. Discourses of dependency: social housing, welfare, and political debate 4. Counter-narratives: dependency, culture, and the myth of worklessness PART II Social housing, wellbeing, and experiences of the home 5. Experiences of the home: place, identity, and security 6. Mental health, happiness, and satisfaction with life PART III Rethinking the ‘social’ in social housing: common needs, shared identities 7. Social housing and welfare spheres 8. Rethinking the ‘social’ in social housing: common needs, shared identities

    £76.00

  • Hope Under Neoliberal Austerity

    Bristol University Press Hope Under Neoliberal Austerity

    Book SynopsisThis book explores the ways in which communities are responding today's society as government policies are increasingly promoting privatisation, deregulation and individualisation of responsibilities, providing insights into the efficacy of these approaches through key policy issues including access to food, education and health.Table of Contents1. Islands of Hope in a Sea of Despair: Civil Society in an Age of Austerity 2. The North East of England: Place, Economy and People Part 1: The Public Sector and Civil Society 3. The Public Sector and Civil Society: Introduction 4. Innovation Outside the State: The Glendale Gateway Trust 5. The Byker Community Trust and the ‘Byker Approach’ 6. Café Society: Transforming Community Through Quiet Activism and Reciprocity 7. ‘Computer Says No’: Exploring Social Justice in Digital Services 8. Drive to Thrive: A Place-Based Approach to Tackling Poverty in Gateshead 9. City of Dreams: Enabling Children and Young People’s Cultural Participation and Civic Voice in Newcastle and Gateshead 10. Are We ‘All in This Together?’: Reflecting on the Continuities Between Austerity and COVID-19 Crises Part 2: The Civic University 11. The Civic University: Introduction 12. Reinventing a Civic Role for the 21st-Century: The Cathedral and the University 13. Realising the Potential of Universities for Inclusive, Innovation-Led Development: The Case of the Newcastle City Futures Urban Living Partnership Pilot 14. Future Homes: Developing New Responses Through New Organisations 15. The Good, the Bad and the Disconcerting: A Week in the Life of University Project Based Learning for Schools 16. The Containment of Democratic Innovation: Reflections from Two University Collaborations 17. Citizen Power, the University and the North East 18. So What is a University in Any Case?: A Grass-roots Perspective on the University and Urban Social Justice 19. Conclusion: Hope in an Age of Austerity and a Time of Anxiety

    £76.00

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