Robert W. LakeReadings in Urban Analysis
Perspectives on Urban Form and Structure
I: The Neo-Classical Tradition
1: A Theory of the Urban Land Market
2: The Spatial Structure of the Housing Market
3: The Journey-to-Work as a Determinant of Residential Location
II: Human Ecology
4: Human Ecology
5: Toward a More Human Human Ecology: An Urban Research Strategy
6: Growth, Politics, and the Stratification of Places
7: Men Without Property: The Tramp's Classification and Use of Urban Space
III: Conflict and Institutional Constraints
8: Local Interests and Urban Political Processes In Market Societies
9: Locational Conflict and the Politics of Consumption
10: Urban Social Theory and Research
11: The Role of Institutions in the Inner London Housing Market: The Case of Islington
12: Large Builders, Federal Housing Programmes, and Postwar Suburbanization
IV: Marxist Approaches
13: The Urban Process Under Capitalism: A Framework for Analysis
14: Capital Accumulation and Urbanization in the United States
15: Class-Monopoly Rent, Finance Capital and the Urban Revolution
16: Toward A Theory of Gentrification: A Back to the City Movement by Capital, Not People