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 6 到 10 筆結果,共 40 筆
... stability. Some critiques of liberalism have stressed the ways in which liberalism's tolerance of radical demands by racial minorities during the civil rights era hurt white support for liberalism's economic and social agenda. In his ...
... explain this transformation by emphasizing economic pressures on urban neighborhoods and cities that disrupted their social stability and encouraged a backlash against those whom they 22 | Conceptualizing the Paradigm Shift.
... stability and encouraged a backlash against those whom they associated with the new conditions, namely, the homeless and disorderly. British geographer Neil Smith looks from this perspective at the role of race in the neighborhood-level ...
... stability of middleclass white neighborhoods to pursue the racial integration of schools and housing. That is, liberalism becomes a stand-in for the notion of centralized governmental authority acting at the expense of the lawabiding ...
... stability of its new entrepreneurial spaces. Neoliberalizing urbanism is a single process of the entrepreneurial subsidizing of corporate risk, social and economic polarization, and repressive control mechanisms. What this approach ...
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 |