The Personality of American Cities

The Personality of American Cities
Title The Personality of American Cities PDF eBook
Author Edward Hungerford
Publisher
Pages 438
Release 1913
Genre Cities and towns
ISBN

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The Personality of American Cities

The Personality of American Cities
Title The Personality of American Cities PDF eBook
Author Edward Hungerford
Publisher
Pages 434
Release 1913
Genre Cities and towns
ISBN

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The American City

The American City
Title The American City PDF eBook
Author Arthur Hastings Grant
Publisher
Pages 694
Release 1920
Genre Cities and towns
ISBN

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THE AMERICAN CITY

THE AMERICAN CITY
Title THE AMERICAN CITY PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages 1018
Release 1928
Genre
ISBN

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The Great Inversion and the Future of the American City

The Great Inversion and the Future of the American City
Title The Great Inversion and the Future of the American City PDF eBook
Author Alan Ehrenhalt
Publisher Vintage
Pages 290
Release 2013-01-22
Genre Political Science
ISBN 0307474372

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Eye-opening and thoroughly engaging, this is an indispensible look at American urban/suburban society and its future. In The Great Inversion, Alan Ehrenhalt, one of our leading urbanologists, reveals how the roles of America’s cities and suburbs are changing places—young adults and affluent retirees moving in, while immigrants and the less affluent are moving out—and addresses the implications of these shifts for the future of our society. Ehrenhalt shows us how the commercial canyons of lower Manhattan are becoming residential neighborhoods, and how mass transit has revitalized inner-city communities in Chicago and Brooklyn. He explains why car-dominated cities like Phoenix and Charlotte have sought to build twenty-first-century downtowns from scratch, while sprawling postwar suburbs are seeking to attract young people with their own form of urbanized experience.

New Community Civics

New Community Civics
Title New Community Civics PDF eBook
Author Ray Osgood Hughes
Publisher
Pages 528
Release 1924
Genre United States
ISBN

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Robert Clifton Weaver and the American City

Robert Clifton Weaver and the American City
Title Robert Clifton Weaver and the American City PDF eBook
Author Wendell E. Pritchett
Publisher University of Chicago Press
Pages 462
Release 2010-02-15
Genre History
ISBN 0226684504

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From his role as Franklin Roosevelt’s “negro advisor” to his appointment under Lyndon Johnson as the first secretary of Housing and Urban Development, Robert Clifton Weaver was one of the most influential domestic policy makers and civil rights advocates of the twentieth century. This volume, the first biography of the first African American to hold a cabinet position in the federal government, rescues from obscurity the story of a man whose legacy continues to affect American race relations and the cities in which they largely play out. Tracing Weaver’s career through the creation, expansion, and contraction of New Deal liberalism, Wendell E. Pritchett illuminates his instrumental role in the birth of almost every urban initiative of the period, from public housing and urban renewal to affirmative action and rent control. Beyond these policy achievements, Weaver also founded racial liberalism, a new approach to race relations that propelled him through a series of high-level positions in public and private agencies working to promote racial cooperation in American cities. But Pritchett shows that despite Weaver’s efforts to make race irrelevant, white and black Americans continued to call on him to mediate between the races—a position that grew increasingly untenable as Weaver remained caught between the white power structure to which he pledged his allegiance and the African Americans whose lives he devoted his career to improving.