Description
Book SynopsisTrade Review"
Remaking the Rust Belt is a powerful book which has much to offer, not just to historians of urban policy and political economy but also those seeking to understand the wider political, cultural and psephological shifts under way in the American industrial Northeast and Midwest." *
History *
"
Remaking the Rust Belt is lucid, balanced, and engaging. Tracy Neumann's argument about the importance of place is compelling and well sustained." * Richard Harris, McMaster University *
"
Remaking the Rustbelt provides a welcome addition to the literature on the history of industrial policy and planning in North America. For Neumann, the 'Rustbelt' is as much a set of ideas and experiences as it is a place. Rejecting conventional narratives associated with terms like 'deindustrialization' and 'neoliberalism,' she tells a more complicated story of public officials and private interests acting across a variety of geographies and scales, sometimes in collusion, sometimes in conflict, always in tension. We see mayors, planners, economic development officers, corporate executives, labor leaders, and community activists grappling with the full range of problems that emerge from large-scale transformations in the global economy. In the end, Neumann demonstrates how the 'post-industrial' turn of the last fifty years was not simply the inevitable outcome of economic forces but, rather, a conscious production of a new social imaginary-a world in the making." * Joseph Heathcott, The New School *
Table of ContentsIntroduction. Cities and the Postindustrial Imagination
Chapter 1. The Roots of Postindustrialism
Chapter 2. Forging Growth Partnerships
Chapter 3. Postindustrialism and Its Critics
Chapter 4. The New Geography of Downtown
Chapter 5. Spaces of Production and Spaces of Consumption
Chapter 6. Marketing Postindustrialism
Epilogue. Cities for Whom?
List of Abbreviations
Notes
Index
Acknowledgments