Details

Introduction to Cities


Introduction to Cities

How Place and Space Shape Human Experience
2. Aufl.

von: Xiangming Chen, Anthony M. Orum, Krista E. Paulsen

29,99 €

Verlag: Wiley-Blackwell
Format: PDF
Veröffentl.: 23.02.2018
ISBN/EAN: 9781119167730
Sprache: englisch
Anzahl Seiten: 432

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Beschreibungen

<p><i>The revised and updated second edition of </i><i>Introduction to Cities</i><i> </i>explores why cities are such a vital part of the human experience and how they shape our everyday lives. Written in engaging and accessible terms, <i>Introduction to Cities</i><i> </i>examines the study of cities through two central concepts: that cities are <i>places</i>, where people live, form communities, and establish their own identities, and that they are <i>spaces</i>, such as the inner city and the suburb, that offer a way to configure and shape the material world and natural environment.</p> <p><i>Introduction to Cities</i> covers the theory of cities from an historical perspective right through to the most recent theoretical developments. The authors offer a balanced account of life in cities and explore both positive and negative themes. In addition, the text takes a global approach, with examples ranging from Berlin and Chicago to Shanghai and Mumbai. The book is extensively illustrated with updated maps, charts, tables, and photographs.</p> <p>This new edition also includes a new section on urban planning as well as new chapters on cities as contested spaces, exploring power and politics in an urban context. It contains; information on the status of poor and marginalized groups and the impact of neoliberal policies; material on gender and sexuality; and presents a greater range of geographies with more attention to European, Latin American, and African cities.</p> <p>Revised and updated, <i>Introduction to Cities </i>provides a complete introduction to the history, evolution, and future of our modern cities.</p>
<p>List of illustrations xi</p> <p>List of tables xvii</p> <p>List of boxes xviii</p> <p>About the authors xx</p> <p>Preface to the second edition xxi</p> <p>Acknowledgments xxii</p> <p>Walk-through tour xxiv</p> <p><b>Part I The Foundations 1</b></p> <p><b>1 Cities as places and spaces 2</b></p> <p>Cities as places 5</p> <p>Exploring further 1.1 8</p> <p>Identity, community, and security 10</p> <p>Places as the site of our identity 10</p> <p>Places as the site of community 11</p> <p>Places as sites of security 13</p> <p>Studying the city 1.1 14</p> <p>Human beings make and remake places 15</p> <p>Place and space 17</p> <p>Studying the city 1.2 18</p> <p>Making the city better 1.1 21</p> <p>Cities shape the fates of human beings 22</p> <p>Cities and people 24</p> <p><b>2 Social theories of urban space and place: The early perspectives 26</b></p> <p>The social and theoretical roots of modern urban theory 27</p> <p>Studying the city 2.1 29</p> <p>Ferdinand Tönnies: Community and society 30</p> <p>Georg Simmel: The metropolis and mental life 31</p> <p>Tönnies and Simmel: Further reflections 33</p> <p>The Chicago School of Sociology 33</p> <p>The city as social space 34</p> <p>The city as concentric zones 36</p> <p>The city, social change, and social order 38</p> <p>Studying the city 2.2 40</p> <p>Life in the city as a way of life 41</p> <p>Making the city better 2.1 43</p> <p>Early social theories of urban life 44</p> <p><b>3 Social theories of urban space and place: Perspectives in the post-World War II era 47</b></p> <p>Theoretical descendants of Marx 48</p> <p>Manuel Castells and the urban question 48</p> <p>David Harvey: Injustice and inequality in the city 49</p> <p>John Logan and Harvey Molotch: The city as a growth machine 51</p> <p>Making the city better 3.1 52</p> <p>Making the city better 3.2 54</p> <p>Further reflections: Marx and the critique of modern cities 55</p> <p>The return to place and the turn to culture 56</p> <p>Jane Jacobs and the discovery of community in the modern metropolis 56</p> <p>Studying the city 3.1 57</p> <p>Sharon Zukin and the turn to culture 59</p> <p>Exploring further 3.1 61</p> <p>Going global 64</p> <p>The 1980s and the creation of the global city 64</p> <p>Power, politics, and ordinary lives 67</p> <p>Evaluating theories of the city 68</p> <p><b>4 Methods and rules for the study of cities 71</b></p> <p>First rules for doing a social science of cities 73</p> <p>The rule of validity 73</p> <p>The rule of reliability 75</p> <p>Exploring further 4.1 76</p> <p>Cities and the question of numbers 78</p> <p>Studying the city 4.1 79</p> <p>The city as a case study 79</p> <p>The city as the typical case 81</p> <p>The city as a prototypical case 83</p> <p>Ethnographic and historical case studies 86</p> <p>Ethnographic case studies 86</p> <p>Studying the city 4.2 87</p> <p>Historical case studies 89</p> <p>From one to multiple cases 90</p> <p>Studying the city 4.3 92</p> <p>A last but very important rule on doing a good social science of cities: Fitting good theory to good methods 94</p> <p>And what about insight? 95</p> <p><b>Part II The Changing Metropolis 99</b></p> <p><b>5 The metropolis and its expansion: Early insights and basic principles 100</b></p> <p>Metropolitan growth: Basic features 102</p> <p>Studying the city 5.1 104</p> <p>The mobility of people and groups in the metropolis 105</p> <p>Social differences and migration in the metropolis 106</p> <p>Migration and the expansion of the metropolis 108</p> <p>The metropolitan center and its links to the hinterlands 110</p> <p>Studying the city 5.2 112</p> <p>Human agents and social institutions in the expansion of the metropolis 112</p> <p>Making the city better 5.1 115</p> <p>Planning and metropolitan development 116</p> <p>Exploring further 5.1 121</p> <p>Urban growth, institutions, and human agents 124</p> <p>6 The origins and development of suburbs 126</p> <p>What is a suburb? Definitions and variations 128</p> <p>Alternative suburban forms 130</p> <p>A brief history of suburban development 132</p> <p>The original suburbs 132</p> <p>Culture and the demand for suburban living 134</p> <p>Making the city better 6.1 135</p> <p>Exploring further 6.1 136</p> <p>Early suburban diversity 138</p> <p>Transportation technologies and suburban expansion 138</p> <p>Making the city better 6.2 140</p> <p>The role of policy in suburban expansion 141</p> <p>The mass production of US suburbs 144</p> <p>Changes and challenges in contemporary suburbs 145</p> <p>Privatization and gated communities 146</p> <p>The varied fates of older suburbs 148</p> <p>Suburbs as places 151</p> <p>Studying the city 6.1 150</p> <p><b>7 Changing metropolitan landscapes after World War II 154</b></p> <p>Los Angeles: The prototype of the postwar metropolis 156</p> <p>Exploring further 7.1 160</p> <p>The changing metropolitan order 162</p> <p>The decline of older industrial cities 162</p> <p>The rise of the postindustrial/postmodern metropolitan regions 163</p> <p>The importance of transportation, again 164</p> <p>The remaking of places and spaces: The profound human and political consequences 165</p> <p>Making the city better 7.1 167</p> <p>The emerging global economy: A brief overview 168</p> <p>Studying the city 7.1 172</p> <p>People, place, and space in a global world 174</p> <p><b>Part III Social Inequalities and Power in the Metropolis 179</b></p> <p><b>8 The early metropolis as a place of inequality 180</b></p> <p>Colonial cities as unequal places 182</p> <p>Early urban diversity 184</p> <p>Gender in the early metropolis 185</p> <p>Cities of immigrants 187</p> <p>Immigrant lives: New York’s Five Points 187</p> <p>Studying the city 8.1 191</p> <p>The Five Points case in context 193</p> <p>Early reform and intervention efforts 195</p> <p>Making the American ghetto 196</p> <p>Integrated beginnings 196</p> <p>Making the city better 8.1 197</p> <p>New neighbours, new tensions 198</p> <p>The perpetuation and implications of black ghettos 199</p> <p>Studying the city 8.2 200</p> <p>Exploring further 8.1 201</p> <p>The significance of urban diversity and inequality 203</p> <p><b>9 Inequality and diversity in the post - World War II metropolis 206</b></p> <p>Inequality and the metropolis 207</p> <p>Poverty and race 207</p> <p>Exploring further 9.1 209</p> <p>Poverty and homelessness 210</p> <p>Making the city better 9.1 212</p> <p>Gentrification and the remaking of the metropolis 214</p> <p>Exploring further 9.2 215</p> <p>Social diversity and the transformed metropolis 218</p> <p>The new immigration and the transformation of the metropolis 218</p> <p>Europe 218</p> <p>Studying the city 9.1 221</p> <p>The United States and Canada 222</p> <p>Reconstructing the contemporary metropolis 225</p> <p>New ethnic enclaves 225</p> <p>LGBT neighbourhoods 228</p> <p>Studying the city 9.2 231</p> <p>The Western metropolis in flux 232</p> <p><b>10 Power, authority, and cities as contested spaces 236</b></p> <p>States and markets 237</p> <p>The changing global economy 238</p> <p>Cities today as contested spaces 240</p> <p>The nature of local governance and politics 241</p> <p>Local authorities and marginalized peoples 243</p> <p>African Americans and local authorities 244</p> <p>The homeless and local authorities 245</p> <p>The very poor and local authorities 246</p> <p>Contesting mistreatment by local authorities: Resistance and aid 246</p> <p>Making the city better 10.1 247</p> <p>Exploring further 10.1 249</p> <p>Major contests over deep meanings and spaces in the metropolis 250</p> <p>Jerusalem: The quintessential contested city 250</p> <p>The contested spaces of Berlin 252</p> <p>Conclusion 254</p> <p><b>Part IV The Metropolis in the Developing World 257</b></p> <p><b>11 Urbanization and cities in developing countries 258</b></p> <p>Urbanization: The basic path and its impact on place 259</p> <p>Developing-country cities in historical perspective 261</p> <p>Studying the city 11.1 262</p> <p>The basic dimensions of urbanization 263</p> <p>Urban hierarchy 264</p> <p>Urban primacy 265</p> <p>Over-urbanization versus under-urbanization 265</p> <p>Studying the city 11.2 267</p> <p>Natural increase and in-migration 268</p> <p>From process and system to place 269</p> <p>A profile with multiple wrinkles 269</p> <p>Megacities as places: Opportunities and challenges 271</p> <p>Size and density 271</p> <p>Creating wealth and sustaining poverty 272</p> <p>Exploring further 11.1 274</p> <p>Making the city better 11.1 276</p> <p>The developing megacity as a lived place 277</p> <p>Making the city better 11.2 279</p> <p>Governing the megacities 280</p> <p>Studying the city 11.3 281</p> <p>Reassessing the developing-country city 283</p> <p><b>12 Cities in the global economy 286</b></p> <p>Cities in a globalizing world: Theoretical background 287</p> <p>Emerging cities in the global economy 288</p> <p>Yiwu, China 288</p> <p>Rajarhat, India 290</p> <p>Further reflections on Yiwu 291</p> <p>Re-emerging cities in the global economy 292</p> <p>Berlin, Germany: A once-prosperous, then challenged, and now re-emerging local culture 292</p> <p>Shanghai, China: Local change in a global renaissance city 294</p> <p>Deeper into the global economy 297</p> <p>Dongguan, China: A place transformed from a rural township into a global factory-city 297</p> <p>Studying the city 12.1 300</p> <p>Dubai, United Arab Emirates: From desert to urban miracle to mirage 301</p> <p>Cities in a fully networked global economy 303</p> <p>The regional dimension and mediation of cities 303</p> <p>Becoming globally networked 305</p> <p>Exploring further 12.1 306</p> <p>Interdependence between cities and the global economy 308</p> <p>Studying the city 12.2 309</p> <p>Systematic constraint and individual flexibility 310</p> <p>The global restructuring of cities 310</p> <p>Making the city better 12.1 312</p> <p><b>Part V Challenges of Today and The Metropolis of the Future 315</b></p> <p><b>13 Urban environments and sustainability 316</b></p> <p>Making use of nature 317</p> <p>Natural attributes and urban development 317</p> <p>Interpreting and manipulating nature 318</p> <p>Studying the city 13.1 321</p> <p>Inviting “disaster” 322</p> <p>Why rebuild? 323</p> <p>Urban environments 326</p> <p>Local environmental concerns 327</p> <p>Making the city better 13.1 329</p> <p>Environment and inequality 329</p> <p>Making the city better 13.2 331</p> <p>Global environmental concerns 332</p> <p>Urbanization’s environmental impacts 333</p> <p>Cities and climate change 333</p> <p>Addressing environmental issues: Toward sustainability 336</p> <p>Exploring further 13.1 337</p> <p><b>14 The remaking and future of cities 341</b></p> <p>Between place and space: Reinforcing a theoretical vision 342</p> <p>Remaking cities at critical moments 344</p> <p>The crisis of Detroit 344</p> <p>The remaking of Detroit 345</p> <p>Making the city better 14.1 346</p> <p>Place-remaking on a larger scale 348</p> <p>Daily place-remaking from below 349</p> <p>Remaking neighbourhoods and communities 350</p> <p>The remaking of Brooklyn, New York 350</p> <p>From Detroit and New York to China and Shanghai – again 350</p> <p>Studying the city 14.1 352</p> <p>Remaking cities for the future 354</p> <p>Scaling up and looking forward 354</p> <p>The China and India scenarios and their wider implications 354</p> <p>Cities of the future and the future of cities 358</p> <p>Making the city better 14.2 359</p> <p>A detour back to planning regarding its role in shaping future cities 360</p> <p>The foundational attributes of future cities 361</p> <p>Exploring further 14.1 364</p> <p>A final look at the twenty-first-century city 365</p> <p>Glossary 368</p> <p>References 376</p> <p>Index 393</p>
<p> <strong>Xiangming Chen</strong> is the founding Dean and Director of the Center for Urban and Global Studies and Paul Raether Distinguished Professor of Global Urban Studies and Sociology at Trinity College, Hartford, and a guest professor in the School of Social Development and Public Policy at Fudan University, Shanghai, China. <p><strong>Anthony M. Orum</strong> is Professor Emeritus of Sociology at the University of Illinois at Chicago, USA. He was the founding editor of the journal <em>City & Community.</em> <p><strong>Krista E. Paulsen</strong> is Associate Professor of Sociology and Associate Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at the University of North Florida, USA.
<p> The revised and updated second edition of <em>Introduction to Cities</em> explores why cities are such a vital part of the human experience and how they shape our everyday lives. Written in engaging and accessible terms, <em>Introduction to Cities</em> examines the study of cities through two central concepts: that cities are places, where people live, form communities, and establish their own identities, and that they are spaces, such as the inner city and the suburb, that offer a way to configure and shape the material world and natural environment. <p> <em>Introduction to Cities</em> covers the theory of cities from an historical perspective right through to the most recent theoretical developments. The authors offer a balanced account of life in cities and explore both positive and negative themes. In addition, the text takes a global approach, with examples ranging from Berlin and Chicago to Shanghai and Mumbai. The book is extensively illustrated with updated maps, charts, tables, and photographs. <p> This new edition also includes a new section on urban planning as well as new chapters on cities as contested spaces, exploring power and politics in an urban context. It contains; information on the status of poor and marginalized groups and the impact of neoliberal policies; material on gender and sexuality; and presents a greater range of geographies with more attention to European, Latin American, and African cities. <p>Revised and updated, <em>Introduction to Cities</em> provides a complete introduction to the history, evolution, and future of our modern cities.

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