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 55 筆
... response was to begin to target homeless people in certain high-visibility areas of the city such as Golden Gate Park, the Civic Center, and Union Square. Through aggressive ticketing by police and outreach efforts by social workers, he ...
... response was to treat these groups as a major threat to public order and to place them at the center of new aggressive policing tactics and punitive social policies. Part of the innovation of “quality of life” is how it grouped and used ...
... response to the explosive growth in the number of homeless people across the country in the 1980s, cities created ... responses. People were motivated to volunteer in soup kitchens, give out clothing, stock food pantries, and give money ...
... responses slowly became more routinized and structured. Emergency shelters became long-term shelters or transitional housing. Soup kitchens had to rely more and more on large government budgets to hire professional staffs rather than ...
... Response By the early 1990s, the unabated increase of public disorder caused a dramatic shift in social policies and urban politics that ushered in an urban political backlash in New York and many other American cities. This is not to ...
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 |