Ebook: Regions That Work: How Cities and Suburbs Can Grow Together
- Tags: Architecture, Buildings, Criticism, Decoration & Ornament, Drafting & Presentation, Historic Preservation, History, Individual Architects & Firms, Interior Design, Landscape, Project Planning & Management, Regional, Sustainability & Green Design, Urban & Land Use Planning, Arts & Photography, Economics, Banks & Banking, Commerce, Commercial Policy, Comparative, Development & Growth, Digital Currencies, Econometrics, Economic Conditions, Economic History, Economic Policy & Development, Environmental Economics, Free Enterpr
- Series: Globalization and Community
- Year: 2000
- Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
- Edition: 1
- Language: English
- pdf
"A remarkable and timely book. . . . Must reading." William Julius Wilson
Offering a new vision of community-based regionalism, this book arrives just as "smart growth" measures and other attempts to link cities and suburbs are beginning to make their mark on the political and analytical scene. The authors make a powerful case for emphasizing equity, arguing that metropolitan areas must reduce poverty in order to grow and that low-income individuals must make regional connections in order to escape poverty.
A hard-hitting analysis of Los Angeles demonstrates that the roots of the unrest of 1992 lay in regional economic deterioration and that the recovery was slowed by insufficient attention to the poor. Regions That Work then provides a history and critique of community-development corporations, a statistical analysis of the poverty-growth relationship in seventy-four metro areas, a detailed study of three regions that have produced superior equity outcomes, and a provocative call for new policies and new politics.
Manuel Pastor Jr. is professor of Latin American and Latino studies and director of the Center for Justice, Tolerance, and Community at the University of California, Santa Cruz. Peter Dreier is E. P. Clapp Distinguished Professor of Politics at Occidental College and director of the Urban & Environmental Policy Program. J. Eugene Grigsby III is director of the Advanced Policy Institute and professor at UCLA's School of Public Policy and Social Research. Marta Lpez-Garza is an assistant professor and holds a joint position in the Women's Studies Department and the Chicano/Chicana Studies Department at California State University, Northridge.
Globalization and Community Series, volume 6 Translation Inquiries: University of Minnesota Press