Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 384
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-8476-8499-1 • Paperback • December 1997 • $62.00 • (£48.00)
Joe R. Feagin is professor of sociology at the University of Florida.
Chapter 1 The New Urban Paradigm: Urban Social Science for the Twenty-First Century
Part 2 I. Cities in Global Perspective
Chapter 3 Cities and the New International Division of Labor: An Overview
Chapter 4 The Global Context of Metropolitan Growth: Houston and the Oil Industry
Chapter 5 Extractive Regions in Developed Countries: A Comparative Analysis of the Oil Capitals/ Houston and Aberdeen
Part 6 II. Powerful Economic Actors in City Development
Chapter 7 Cities in Conflict
Chapter 8 Urban Real Estate Speculation: Implications for Social Science and Urban Planning
Chapter 9 Irrationality in Real Estate Investment: The Case of Houston
Part 10 III. The Political Dimension of City Development
Chapter 11 The Corporate Center Strategy: The State in Central Cities
Chapter 12 Arenas of Conflict: Zoning and Land-Use Reform in Critical Political-Economic Perspective
Chapter 13 Are Planners Collective Capitalists? The Cases of Aberdeen and Houston
Part 14 IV. Race, Racism, and City Development
Chapter 15 Slavery Unwilling to Die: The Background of Black Oppression in the 1980s
Chapter 16 The Continuing Significance of Race: Antiblack Discrimination in Public Places
Chapter 17 The Continuing Significance of Racism: Discrimination Against Black Students in White Colleges
Chapter 18 Changing Black Americans to Fit a Racist System?
Part 19 V. Review and Reprise
Chapter 20 Urban Sociology: Feagin Style
Chapter 21 The New Urban Paradigm: Feagin's Contributions
Feagin has a good eye for identifying a theoretical problem. His continued focus on Black America contributes to the 'new urban paradigm' by posing a challenge that should not be ignored.
— Contemporary Sociology
An important resource to everyone who wants to understand urban development.
— Choice Reviews
Feagin has done much to shake-up the mainstream and establishment and this collection of his work provides many interesting insights and deserves to be widely read.
— Capital & Class
If this book introduces and reinforces certain important points about the political economy of urban development to mainstream sociology, then this is an important function to serve. For planners, this book provides a convenient compilation of the writings of Joe Feagin, something that makes purchasing the book worthwhile. His most poignant statement comes early in the book when he highlights the connection between some people's affluence and other's poverty. A book that helps make this point, is a book worth having in one's collection.
— Journal of the American Planning Association
Ever impassioned, always critical, never satisfied with a reality that seems to fall short of the ideals of justice and equality, Feagin's is a voice for the city, and for America, that should and must be heard.
— Anthony M. Orum, University of Illinois at Chicago