City of Disorder: How the Quality of Life Campaign Transformed New York PoliticsNYU Press, 2008年4月1日 - 252 頁 2009 Association of American University Presses Award for Jacket Design |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 17 筆
... mental health and drug treatment facilities or to look at the ways in which housing and labor markets were being altered by both global and local political and economic factors. As the recession gave way to the economic expansion of ...
... Mental health officials pointed out that with the loss of almost half the city and state's mental health beds since the 1960s, there was nowhere to put people with minor psychological problems exacerbated by regular substance abuse ...
... mental health and substance abuse problems. By the summer of 1991, even many supporters of the homeless, who had preferred an expansion of services instead of evictions, were ready to support the closure and renovation of the park as a ...
... mental hospitals, therapies, and other interventions as more invidious than the problems they were designed to address. In the judicial arena, the courts developed a corresponding body of legal precedent in which constitutional ...
... mental health and substance abuse, training in life skills, and management of social work cases, they decided that individual behavior should be modified by punitive strategies that kept people in line through the threat of economic or ...
內容
1 | |
15 | |
29 | |
Defining Urban Liberalism | 54 |
The Rise of Disorder | 70 |
Globalization and the Urban Crisis | 93 |
The Transformation of Policing | 115 |
The Community Backlash | 144 |
Conclusion | 183 |
Notes | 195 |
Bibliography | 215 |
Index | 223 |
About the Author | 231 |