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Books in the Globalization and Community series

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  • - Primitive Globalization And The Politics Of Urban Community
    by William Sites
    £20.99

  • - How Urban Policies Shape Civic Engagement
    by Elaine B. Sharp
    £18.99 - 49.49

    Asks and answers hard questions about the consequences of local government programs for democracy

  • - Cities and Policymaking in the Global Age
     
    £20.99

    How knowledge and power flow between places and impact cities worldwide.

  • - Ethnic Enclave, Global Change
    by Jan Lin
    £19.99

    This volume presents a real-world picture of New York City's Chinatown, countering the "orientalist" view by looking at the human dimensions and the larger forces of globalization that make this neighbourhood both unique and broadly instructive.

  • - Cities and Policymaking in the Global Age
     
    £54.49

    How knowledge and power flow between places and impact cities worldwide.

  • by Susan E. Clarke
    £19.99

    Using Robert Reich's "The Work of Nations" as a springboard, the text argues that globalism coupled with disparities of wealth and power, changes the work of nations and the role of communities. It examines local entrepreneurial policy choices in the context of economic and political restructuring.

  • - State Power and Local Transformations in a Global Megacity
     
    £20.99

  • - Dharavi and the Right to Stay Put in Globalizing Mumbai
    by Liza Weinstein
    £20.99 - 54.49

  • - Globalized Development and Worker Resistance after Katrina
    by Aaron Schneider
    £19.99 - 76.99

  • - Lifestyle Migration under Late Capitalism
    by Matthew Hayes
    £74.49

  • - Global Policy versus Everyday Survival in Buenos Aires
    by Jacob Lederman
    £20.99 - 80.49

  • - The Eclipse of Local Democratic Governance
     
    £85.49

  • - Street Livelihoods and Marginal Citizenship in Britain
    by Suzanne M. Hall
    £21.49 - 76.99

  • - The Eclipse of Local Democratic Governance
     
    £23.99

    Examines the complex ecology of quasi-public and privatized institutions that mobilize and administer many of the political, administrative, and fiscal resources of today’s metropolitan regionsIn recent decades metropolitan regions in the United States have witnessed the rise of multitudes of “shadow governments” that often supersede or replace functions traditionally associated with municipalities and other local governments inherited from the urban past. Shadow governments take many forms, ranging from billion-dollar special authorities that span entire urban regions, to public–private partnerships and special districts created to accomplish particular tasks, to privatized gated communities, to neighborhood organizations empowered to receive private and public funds. They finance and administer public services ranging from the prosaic (garbage collection and water utilities) to the transformative (economic development and infrastructure). Private Metropolis demonstrates that this complex ecosystem of local governance has compromised and even eclipsed democratic processes by moving important policy decisions out of public sight. The quasi-public institutions of urban governance generally escape the budgetary and statutory restraints imposed on traditional local governments and protect policy decisions from the limitations and vagaries of electoral politics. Moving major policy decisions into a privatized and corporatized realm facilitates efficiency and speed, but at the cost of democratic oversight. Increasingly, the urban electorate is left debating symbolic issues only tangentially connected to the actual distribution of the resources that affect people’s lives. The essays in Private Metropolis grapple with the difficult and timely questions that arise from this new ecology of governance: What are the consequences of the proliferation of special authorities, privatized governments, and public–private arrangements? Is the trade-off between democratic accountability and efficiency worth it? Has the public sector, with its messiness and inefficiencies—but also its checks and balances—ceded too much power to these new institutions? By examining such questions, this book provokes a long-overdue debate about the future of urban governance.Contributors: Douglas Cantor, California State U, Long Beach; Ellen Dannin, Pennsylvania State U; Jameson W. Doig, Princeton U; Mary Donoghue; Peter Eisinger, New School; Steven P. Erie, U of California, San Diego; Rebecca Hendrick, U of Illinois at Chicago; Sara Hinkley, U of California, Berkeley; Amanda Kass, U of Illinois at Chicago; Scott A. MacKenzie, U of California, Davis; David C. Perry, U of Illinois at Chicago; James M. Smith, U of Indiana South Bend; Shu Wang, Michigan State U; Rachel Weber, U of Illinois at Chicago.

  • - Planning the Urbanization of Rural China
    by Nick R. Smith
    £76.99

  • - Real Estate and Resistance in the Furniture Capital of the World
    by John Joe Schlichtman
    £85.49

  • - Rapid Growth beyond the Metropolis
    by Ann Markusen
    £22.49

  • - Culture, Real Estate, and Resistance in New York City
    by Christopher Mele
    £19.99 - 49.49

  • - Megaprojects, Slums, and Class Relations in Urban Morocco
    by Koenraad Bogaert
    £80.49

  • - City-Region Governance in London, New York, Paris, and Tokyo
    by Christian Lefevre & Paul Kantor
    £22.49

    The struggle for governability in the world's four leading global city-regions

  • - Beijing, Chicago, and Paris
    by Yue Zhang
    £20.99

  • - Comparative Perspectives on Urban Development
    by Alan Digaetano
    £20.99

  • by Victor M. Valle
    £19.99

  • - How Cities and Suburbs Can Grow Together
    by Marta Lopez-Garza
    £20.99 - 49.49

  • - Gender And The Politics Of Poverty
    by Ananya Roy
    £20.99

  • - Reading The Global Through Clayoquot Sound
    by Karena Shaw
    £19.99 - 52.49

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