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| 008 | 201207s2021 nju ob 001 0 eng | ||
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_a9781119316916 _q(ebook) |
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_aDLC _beng _cDLC _erda |
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| 050 | 0 | 0 | _aHT119 |
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_a307.7609/05 _223 |
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_aCompanion to urban and regional studies / _cEdited by Anthony M Orum, Javier Ruiz-Tagle, Serena Vicari Haddock. |
| 263 | _a2103 | ||
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_aHoboken, NJ : _bJohn Wiley & Sons, _c2021 |
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| 300 | _a1 online resource | ||
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_acomputer _bc _2rdamedia |
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_aonline resource _bcr _2rdacarrier |
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| 500 | _aABOUT THE AUTHOR Anthony M. Orum is Professor Emeritus of Sociology at the University of Illinois-Chicago, USA, and Editor-in-Chief of The Wiley Blackwell Encyclopedia of Urban and Regional Studies. His work has covered a variety of topics, including the growth and development of American cities and the social psychological roots of politics, voting, and political participation in the United States. Javier Ruiz-Tagle is Assistant Professor at the Institute of Urban and Territorial Studies at the Pontifical Catholic University of Chile. He specializes in topics of residential segregation, housing policies, neighborhood effects, urban marginality, and comparative studies. Serena Vicari Haddock is Senior Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy, and is a member of the European Spatial Development and Planning (ESDP) network. Her primary research interests are urban development and regeneration policies and governance in Italian cities. | ||
| 504 | _aIncludes bibliographical references and index. | ||
| 505 | 0 | _aTABLE OF CONTENTS Notes on Contributors viii Preface xxi Introduction: A World of Cities and Urban Problems in the Twenty-First Century xxiv Javier Ruiz-Tagle, Anthony Orum, and Serena Vicari Haddock Part I Cities Across World Regions 1 1 Cities and Regions in South Asia 3 Tanvi Bhatikar and Neha Sami 2 Making Cities and Regions in Globalising East Asia 21 Junxi Qian, Jia Ling, and Shenjing He 3 Latin American Cities and Regions 43 Guillermo Jajamovich, Oscar Sosa López, and Gabriel Silvestre 4 Cities and Regions in Sub-Saharan Africa 64 Warren Smit 5 Australasian Cities: Urban Change Across Australia and New Zealand 85 Kristian Ruming and Tom Baker 6 European Cities Between Continuity and Change 109 Yuri Kazepov, Roberta Cucca, Byeongsun Ahn, and Christophe Verrier 7 The North American City 135 Jon Teaford Part II Leading Theoretical Perspectives and Approaches 153 8 New Directions in Frankfurt Critical Theory for Critical Urban Theory 155 Tino Buchholz 9 Legacies and Remnants of the Chicago School: Lineage-Making and Interdisciplinary Urban Research at the University of Chicago 176 Pranathi Diwakar and Joshua Babcock 10 Environmental Perspectives on Cities 196 Maria Christina Fragkou and Anahí Urquiza 11 Feminist Urban Research: Praxis and Possibility Across Time and Space 218 Brenda Parker Part III Methodological Approaches 237 12 A Critical-Empirical Approach to the Use of Demographic Methods and Sources in Urban Studies 239 Ricardo Truffello, Fernanda Rojas Marchini, and Monica Flores 13 GIS in Urban Studies: A Tool of Expert Analysis, Practical Application, and Citizens’ Participation 265 Inga Gryl, Ana Parraguez Sanchez, and Thomas Jekel 14 Urban Ethnography 282 Margarethe Kusenbach and Japonica Brown-Saracino 15 Cities and Networks 311 Kathryn Freeman Anderson and Zachary P. Neal 16 Policy Mobilities: How Localities Assemble, Mobilise, and Adopt Circulated Forms of Knowledge 329 Astrid Wood Part IV Social Problems In Twenty-First-Century Cities 349 17 Social Heterogeneity and Diversity 351 Ayda Eraydin 18 Inequalities and the City: Gender, Ethnicity, and Class 373 David Benassi, Andrea Ciarini, and Enzo Mingione 19 The Role of Residential Context and Public Policies in the Production of Urban Inequalities 398 María Mercedes Di Virgilio 20 Immigration and Immigrants in European Countries 420 Moshe Semyonov and Rebeca Raijman 21 Migration and Migrants in Post-reform Chinese Cities 450 Da Liu and Zhigang Li 22 Migration and Migrants in the United States: The Case for a Fifth Immigration Phase 475 Christopher Levesque and Jack DeWaard 23 Segregation, Social Mix, and Gentrification: Nexuses 497 Sandra Annunziata, Loretta Lees, and Clara Rivas Alonso Part V Political and Economic Problems In Twenty-First-Century Cities 517 24 Urban Citizenship and Governance 519 Annika Hinze 25 Policies and Policy Approaches in Cities 539 Marc Pradel-Miquel and Marisol García Cabeza 26 Financialisation and Real Estate 562 Anne Haila 27 Housing in the Global North and the Global South 579 Darinka Czischke and Alonso Ayala Part VI Closure 605 28 Conclusions 607 Anthony Orum, Javier Ruiz-Tagle, and Serena Vicari Haddock Index 613 | |
| 520 |
_a"A crucial year for writing about cities and human lives on them Twenty years have passed since the turn of the millennium, and several key events have transformed the world of cities. Events related to war and terrorism changed the whole realm of migration, from international travel, to metropolitan demographic shifts, and to neighborhood policies. Here we can name: the attacks on the twin towers in New York (2001), the beginning of the war in Afghanistan (2001), the end of the Second Congo War (2002), the invasion of Iraq (2003), the attacks in Madrid and London (2005), the Boko Haram insurgency in Africa (2009), and the prominence of ISIS in Iraq (2014). Events related to the environment have shaped international regulations, urban development policies, and political movements. Here we can mention: the Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami (2004), the entrance into force of the Kyoto Protocol (for reduction of greenhouse emissions, 2005), the entrance into force of the Paris Agreement (for limiting global warming, 2016), and the beginning of the Youth Strike for Climate international movement (2018). Events related to economics have changed the pace and the geographical epicenters of the world's development. Here we can name at least the global financial crisis (2008-2009), and the ascendancy of China as the world's second largest economy (2010). Events related to politics have been either the result of long-term processes or the marker for future developments, at the global, national, metropolitan and neighborhood scale. And here we can mention: the beginning of the post-neoliberal experiments in Latin America (2002), the Arab Spring (including the Syrian Civil War) and the student movements in Quebec, London, Mexico City and Santiago de Chile (2011), the beginning of the refugee crisis in Europe (2015), the ascendancy of far right authorities like Theresa May, Boris Johnson, Donald Trump and Jair Bolsonaro (2016-2019), and the beginning of grassroots social outbursts in countries like France, Hong Kong, Chile, Algeria, Colombia, and so on (2018-2019)"-- _cProvided by publisher. |
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| 588 | _aDescription based on print version record and CIP data provided by publisher; resource not viewed. | ||
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_aCities and towns _xHistory _y21st century. |
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_aHistory, Modern _y21st century. |
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| 655 | 0 | _aElectronic books. | |
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_aOrum, Anthony M., _eeditor. |
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_aRuiz-Tagle, Javier, _eeditor. |
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_aVicari Haddock, Serena, _eeditor. |
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_yFull text available at Wiley Online Library Click here to view _uhttps://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/book/10.1002/9781119316916 |
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