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E-raamat: Shrinking Cities: Understanding urban decline in the United States

, (State University of New York at Buffalo, USA.), (Oklahoma State University, USA),
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Shrinking Cities explores the varied places and spaces in which urban decline occurs.This book argues that no single approach is sufficiently capable of explaining, predicting, and controlling the causes and consequences of urban decline in diverse spatial sites and situations. Instead, the book explores shrinking cities within the context of the local, highlighting the need to couple generalizable theoretical approaches with localized frameworks and geospatial methods to understand and manage urban decline.

The book focuses on particular phenomenon in shrinking cities, such as segregation, and outcomes, such as wage inequality, and asks: where does this happen? How does it happen? And how are the outcomes in one place or space connected to those in another? A range of theoretical and methodological perspectives are explored to highlight the intellectual, cultural, political, and economic forces at play in shrinking cities. The book also considers questions surrounding policy and planning and the need for decline-centred governance, central to understanding questions of sustainability and resilience.

This timely contribution argues that an understanding of what the city has become, as it faces shrinkage, is essential toward a critical analysis of theories, methods, and policies. It will appeal to geographers, planners, urban designers and policy makers alike.

Arvustused

This book is extremely well written. The authors offer apt summaries of a wide range of theoretical models of urban change, progrowth and rightsizing policies, and much more. Most importantly, and impressively, they provide clear and concise explanations of the bevy of quantitative approaches applied in their research. This is far more than a well-crafted book on an in vogue topic. It is a foundational text for shrinking cities scholarship. Not only does it provide a thorough review of the urban shrinkage and related literature, it also contributes fundamental empirical evidence of the shrinking cities phenomenon in the United States. It is without a doubt a must read for academics interested in urban shrinkage and decline. I would even go further to contend that it is a must own. - Maxwell Hartt University of Toronto, Economic Geography

List of figures
vi
List of tables
viii
List of boxes
x
Acknowledgments xi
1 Introduction
1(6)
2 Patterns and trends: measuring and mapping urban shrinkage
7(27)
3 Patterns and trends: measuring and mapping urban decline
34(21)
4 Explanations of urban shrinkage and decline
55(22)
5 Shrinkage and decline beyond the central city
77(24)
6 Pro-growth urban policy
101(26)
7 Rightsizing and smart decline
127(27)
8 Challenges and prospects of regional governance
154(29)
9 Sustainability and resilience
183(17)
10 Concluding remarks
200(17)
Appendices 217(8)
Index 225
Russell Weaver is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Geography at Texas State University, USA.



Sharmistha Bagchi-Sen is a Professor of Geography at the State University of New York at Buffalo, USA.









Jason Knight is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Geography and Planning at the State University of New York at Buffalo, USA.



Amy E. Frazier is an Assistant Professor of Geography at Oklahoma State University, USA.