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E-raamat: (Re)Generating Inclusive Cities: Poverty and Planning in Urban North America

  • Formaat: 134 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 20-Jul-2017
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781315463711
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
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  • Formaat: 134 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 20-Jul-2017
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781315463711

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As suburban expansion declines, cities have become essential economic, cultural and social hubs of global connectivity. In an effort to keep or bring-back individuals and families to the urban core, regeneration schemes are increasingly employed in cities across North America. (Re)Generating Inclusive Cities: Poverty & Planning in Urban North America is about urban revitalization and mega-project development, providing comparative analysis of regeneration efforts across five major North American cities.

Each chapter focuses on urban regeneration projects and trends in San Francisco, Toronto, Boston, Vancouver, New York and Seattle, exploring infrastructure projects like the High Line and Big Dig alongside urban neighbourhood creation and regeneration projects. These projects have evolved in the context of unprecedented neoliberal public policy and soaring real estate prices. As such, they make a complex contribution to urban inequality and poverty. How do we understand unprecedented trends in urban regeneration?

This book wrestles with challenging discussions of regeneration, addressing who benefits and who loses in these schemes. It provides policy tools to mitigate harm, while still supporting better urban regeneration and renewal, to build more socially just and inclusive cities.

Arvustused

"If the post-World War II period was the era of the suburbs, the current historical moment belongs to the city. In Canada and the US, young people and empty nesters are flocking to the great urban centers, which are growing in both affluence and inequality. The poor are pushed out to decaying inner ring suburbs or corralled in city neighborhoods that are coming under increasing pressure to gentrify as the cost of living in New York, Montreal, San Francisco and Vancouver skyrockets.

(Re)Generating Inclusive Cities draws our attention to all of the complexities and contradictions that come with this package. From Zuberi and Taylor, we learn about the power (and problems) of mega projects like the High Line, the difficulties of brownfield reclamation, and the social and political challenges of mixed income housing. They challenge received wisdom about hyper-urbanization, force our attention to social policy differences that separate Canada and the US and hence inflect the unfolding of common pressures of globalization and neo-liberal policy making. It is a forceful, intelligent, empirically grounded work that all urban scholars will appreciate."

Katherine Newman, Torrey Little Professor of Sociology and Provost University of Massachusetts, Amherst

Acknowledgments x
Introduction: Urban Renewal in North America in a Neoliberal Context 1(17)
1 Mega-projects From the Big Dig to the High Line: Regenerating the City
18(23)
2 Urban Renewal in North America Today: From HOPE VI to New Models of Inclusive Urban Redevelopment
41(22)
3 Creating New Urban Neighborhoods: The Post-industrial Transformation From Brownfield to Vibrant Community?
63(17)
4 Urban Renewal in Vancouver, Canada
80(17)
5 Urban Regeneration in North America Today: Outcomes, Trends and Future Challenges
97(10)
6 Conclusion and Recommendations
107(13)
Index 120
Dan Zuberi is RBC Chair and Associate Professor of Social Policy at the Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work and School of Public Policy and Governance at the University of Toronto, Canada. His research focuses on urban poverty, health, education, employment and social welfare.









Ariel Taylor is a PhD candidate in the Department of Political Science at the University of Victoria, Canada. Her research focuses on democratization, civil society, neoliberalism and private governance. She holds a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada Graduate Fellowship.