Larry Bennett is a professor of political science at DePaul University and the author of The Third City: Chicago and American Urbanism . Roberta Garner is a professor of sociology at DePaul University and the editor of Social Theory: Continuity and Confrontation . Euan Hague is a professor of geography at DePaul University and a coauthor of Regional and Local Economic Development .
Larry Bennett is a professor of political science at DePaul University and the author of The Third City: Chicago and American Urbanism . Roberta Garner is a professor of sociology at DePaul University and the editor of Social Theory: Continuity and Confrontation . Euan Hague is a professor of geography at DePaul University and a coauthor of Regional and Local Economic Development .Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Larry Bennett is a professor of political science at DePaul University and the author of The Third City: Chicago and American Urbanism . Roberta Garner is a professor of sociology at DePaul University and the editor of Social Theory: Continuity and Confrontation . Euan Hague is a professor of geography at DePaul University and a coauthor of Regional and Local Economic Development .
Inhaltsangabe
Cover Title Page Copyright Contents Preface Introduction: Chicago: Neoliberal City Part I: Context Chapter 1. Class and Race-Ethnicity in a Changing City: A Historical Perspective on Inequalities Chapter 2. Metropolitan Chicago's Geography of Inequality Chapter 3. Contemporary Chicago Politics: Myth, Reality, and Neoliberalism Part II: Neoliberal Visions Chapter 4. Urban Sustainability and the "Greening" of Neoliberal Chicago Chapter 5. Sports and Blue-Collar Mythology in Neoliberal Chicago Part III: Neoliberal Spaces Chapter 6. Remaking Chicago's Industrial Spaces Chapter 7. Becoming "Boystown" in Neoliberal Chicago: A Critical Urban Morphology of the North Chapter 8. Historic Preservation in a Neoliberal Context: From the Medinah Temple to Bloomingdale's Part IV. Neoliberal Processes Chapter 9. Neighborhood Impacts of the Foreclosure Crisis Chapter 10. The Chicago Bid to Host the 2016 Olympics: Much Promised, Little Learned Chapter 11. Surveillance, Security, and Intelligence-Led Policing in Chicago Conclusion: Beyond Neoliberal Chicago The Contributors Index
Cover Title Page Copyright Contents Preface Introduction: Chicago: Neoliberal City Part I: Context Chapter 1. Class and Race-Ethnicity in a Changing City: A Historical Perspective on Inequalities Chapter 2. Metropolitan Chicago's Geography of Inequality Chapter 3. Contemporary Chicago Politics: Myth, Reality, and Neoliberalism Part II: Neoliberal Visions Chapter 4. Urban Sustainability and the "Greening" of Neoliberal Chicago Chapter 5. Sports and Blue-Collar Mythology in Neoliberal Chicago Part III: Neoliberal Spaces Chapter 6. Remaking Chicago's Industrial Spaces Chapter 7. Becoming "Boystown" in Neoliberal Chicago: A Critical Urban Morphology of the North Chapter 8. Historic Preservation in a Neoliberal Context: From the Medinah Temple to Bloomingdale's Part IV. Neoliberal Processes Chapter 9. Neighborhood Impacts of the Foreclosure Crisis Chapter 10. The Chicago Bid to Host the 2016 Olympics: Much Promised, Little Learned Chapter 11. Surveillance, Security, and Intelligence-Led Policing in Chicago Conclusion: Beyond Neoliberal Chicago The Contributors Index
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