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 42 筆
... welfare reform, community development, and policing practices in general. The quality-of-life paradigm is a way of reorienting the efforts of city government away from directly improving the lives of the disenfranchised and toward ...
... welfare bureaucracy. Many thousands, however, left the shelter system each morning and went into the surrounding neighborhoods looking for opportunities to make money, engaging in substance abuse, and, in some cases, wandering aimlessly ...
... welfare policies that constituted urban liberalism in the 1970s and 1980s in relation to the problem of homelessness and other forms of disorder. The quality-of-life paradigm represents a general shift in social policies away from the ...
... welfare recipients, criminals, and the homeless. These were code words for poor minorities, whom, the argument goes, liberal politicians had “coddled” with their poorly designed social programs, which had created a climate of sloth and ...
... welfare programs and criminalizing the homeless and disorderly. Smith explains the backlash against homeless people in the late 1980s by analyzing the immediate economic context of recession and Conceptualizing the Paradigm Shift | 23.
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 |