Urban social geography: an introduction
Gespeichert in:
Hauptverfasser: | , |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Harlow ; Munich [u.a.]
Pearson, Prentice Hall
2006
|
Ausgabe: | 5. ed. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XVI, 375 S. Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. |
ISBN: | 9780131249448 0131249444 |
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a Urban social geography |b an introduction |c Paul Knox and Steven Pinch |
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adam_text | A guide to using this book xiv
Acknowledgements xv
1 Social geography and the sociospatial
dialectic 1
Key questions addressed in this chapter l
1.1 Different approaches within human geography 2
The quantitative approach 2
The behavioural approach 2
The structuralist approach 2
Poststructuralist approaches 3
The study of urban social geography 3
1.2 The sociospatial dialectic 6
1.3 The macro geographical context 7
A changing context for urban social geography 9
Economic change and urban restructuring 9
The imprint of demographic change 11
The city and cultural change 13
Political change and the sociospatial dialectic 15
Chapter summary 15
Key concepts and terms 16
Suggested reading 16
2 The changing economic context of
city life 19
Key questions addressed in this chapter 19
2.1 The precapitalist, preindustrial city 20
2.2 The growth of the industrial city 23
Early models of the spatial structure of industrial cities 24
Marx and the industrial city 24
V
Fordism and the industrial city 25
Keynesianism and the long boom 26
2.3 The contemporary city 28
Neo Fordism 29
Economic and urban change 31
Postindustrial society 33
Globalization 35
Knowledge economies and the informational city 36
Conclusion 38
Chapter summary 39
Key concepts and terms 39
Suggested reading 40
3 The cultures of cities 4i
Key questions addressed in this chapter 41
3.1 What is culture? 42
The materiality of cultures 42
Shared meanings 42
Diversity and difference 43
Identities 44
3.2 Postcolonial theory and the city 45
Hybridity 45
The social construction of culture 47
3.3 Space, power and culture 48
Foucault and the carceral city 48
The social construction of space 49
Space and identity 50
3.4 Postmodernism 52
Postmodernism in the city 53
The aestheticization of consumption 54
3.5 Conclusions 56
Chapter summary 57
Key concepts and terms 58
Suggested reading 58
4 Patterns of sociospatial differentiation 60
Key questions addressed in this chapter 60
4.1 Urban morphology and the physical structure of cities 61
House types, building lots and street layouts 61
Morphogenesis 64
Contents
Environmental quality 69
Townscapes and the genius loci of the built environment 71
Qualitative methods and observational fieldwork in urban areas 73
4.2 Difference and inequality: socioeconomic and
sociocultural patterns 74
Studies of factorial ecology 78
Factorial ecologies as a product of social structure 81
A historical perspective 82
Patterns of social well being 83
Intra urban variations in the quality of life 85
The geography of deprivation and disadvantage 86
Microsimulation of disadvantage 88
Chapter summary 89
Key concepts and terms 91
Suggested reading 91
5 Spatial and institutional frameworks:
citizens, the state and civil society 92
Key questions addressed in this chapter 92
5.1 The interdependence of public institutions and private life 92
Citizenship, patriarchy and racism 93
The law and civil society 94
The changing nature of urban governance 95
5.2 De jure urban spaces 98
Metropolitan fragmentation and its spatial consequences 98
Fiscal imbalance and sociospatial inequality 99
Fiscal mercantilism 100
Municipal service delivery and sociospatial inequality 101
5.3 The democratic base and its spatial framework 101
The spatial organization of elections 103
Malapportionment and gerrymandering 103
The spatiality of key actors in urban governance: elected officials
and city bureaucrats 104
Bureaucracy and sociospatial (re)production 105
The parapolitical structure 105
Business 106
Labour 106
Citizen organizations and special interest groups 106
Homeowners associations: private governments 108
Urban social movements 109
5.4 Community power structures and the role of the local state 110
Regime theory 111
Structuralist interpretations of the political economy of
contemporary cities 111
vii
The local state and the sociospatial dialectic 113
Regulation theory and urban governance 113
Redefining citizenship 115
5.5 The question of social justice in the city 116
Chapter summary 118
Key concepts and terms 118
Suggested reading 118
6 Structures of building provision and
the social production of the urban
environment 120
Key questions addressed in this chapter 120
6.1 Housing submarkets 121
The growth of homeownership 122
Homeownership and social polarization 125
The decline of private renting 125
The effects of rent controls 126
The spatial effects of disinvestment 126
The development of public housing 127
Public housing in the United Kingdom 128
Sociospatial differentiation within the public sector 128
The voluntary sector: the third arm of housing provision 132
6.2 Key actors in the social production of the built environment 134
Landowners and morphogenesis 135
Builders, developers and the search for profit 135
Discrimination by design: architects and planners 138
Women s spaces 139
Women s places 139
Mortgage financiers: social and spatial bias as good business
practice 140
Bias against people 140
Bias against property 141
Real estate agents: manipulating and reinforcing neighbourhood
patterns 143
Manipulating social geographies: blockbusting and gentrification 143
Public housing managers: sorting and grading 147
Problem families and dump estates 147
Chapter summary 149
Key concepts and terms 149
Suggested reading 149
Contents
7 The social dimensions of modern
urbanism 151
Key questions addressed in this chapter 151
7.1 Urban life in Western culture 151
7.2 Urbanism and social theory 152
The Chicago School 154
Urbanism as a way of life 154
The public and private worlds of city life 157
The self: identity and experience in private and public worlds 157
7.3 Social interaction and social networks in urban settings 158
Social network analysis 158
Urban ecology as shaper and outcome of social interaction 161
The spatial model 161
Criticisms of the ecological approach 163
Social interaction in urban environments 164
Social distance and physical distance 164
Chapter summary 167
Key concepts and terms 167
Suggested reading 167
8 Segregation and congregation 168
Key questions addressed in this chapter 168
8.1 Social closure, racism and discrimination 168
8.2 The spatial segregation of minority groups 169
Issues of definition and measurement 170
External factors: discrimination and structural effects 172
Congregation: internal group cohesiveness 175
Clustering for defence 175
Clustering for mutual support 175
Clustering for cultural preservation 176
Spaces of resistance: clustering to facilitate attacks 176
Colonies, enclaves and ghettos 178
Illustrative example 1: structural constraints and cultural preservation
in the United Kingdom 182
Illustrative example 2: migrant workers in continental European cities 184
Chapter summary 186
Key concepts and terms 186
Suggested reading 187
ix
9 Neighbourhood, community and the
social construction of place 188
Key questions addressed in this chapter 188
9.1 Neighbourhood and community 189
Urban villages: community saved? 189
The fragility of communality 190
Suburban neighbourhoods: community transformed? 191
Splintering urbanism and the diversity of suburbia 192
Status panic and crisis communality 193
Communities and neighbourhoods: definitions and classifications 193
9.2 The social construction of urban places 194
Urban lifeworlds, time space routinization and intersubjectivity 196
Structuration and the becoming of place 198
Constructing place through spatial practices 199
Place, consumption and cultural politics 202
Habitus 202
9.3 The social meanings of the built environment 203
The appropriation of space and place: symbolism and coded meanings 203
Architecture, aesthetics and the sociospatial dialectic 204
Commodification 206
Architecture and the circulation of capital 206
Chapter summary 208
Key concepts and terms 209
Suggested reading 209
10 Environment and behaviour in
urban settings 210
Key questions addressed in this chapter 210
10.1 Theories about deviant behaviour 211
Determinist theory 212
Crowding theory 214
Design determinism 214
Alienation 215
Compositional theory 215
Subcultural theory 216
Structuralist theory 217
Multifactor explanations: the example of crime and delinquency 219
Data problems 219
The geography of urban crime 220
10.2 Cognition and perception 223
Designative aspects of urban imagery 224
Cognitive distance 227
Contents
Appraisive aspects of urban imagery 227
The cognitive dimensions of the urban environment 227
Images of the home area 228
Chapter summary 230
Key concepts and terms used 230
Suggested reading 230
11 Bodies, sexuality and the city 231
Key questions addressed in this chapter 231
11.1 Gender, heteropatriarchy and the city 232
Gender roles in the sociospatial dialectic 233
11.2 Sexuality and the city 236
Prostitution and the city 236
Urbanization and prostitution 236
Sex workers in contemporary cities 237
Homosexuality and the city 237
The social construction of sexuality 238
Homosexual urban ecology 238
Gay spaces 239
Lesbian spaces 239
Queer politics: lipstick lesbians and gay skinheads 242
11.3 Disability and the city 244
The social construction of disability 245
Disability in urban settings 245
Chapter summary 248
Key concepts and terms 248
Suggested reading 248
12 Residential mobility and neighbourhood
change 250
Key questions addressed in this chapter 250
12.1 Patterns of household mobility 252
Movers and stayers 252
Migration data 253
Patterns of in migration 253
Intra urban moves 254
Distance and direction 254
Household movement and urban ecology 254
The determinants of residential mobility 255
Reasons for moving 255
Space needs and life course changes 255
The decision to move 258
The search for a new residence 261
xi
Specifying the desiderata of a new home 261
Searching for vacancies 262
Time constraints 263
Choosing a new home 264
12.2 Residential mobility and neighbourhood change 264
High status movement, filtering and vacancy chains 266
Obstacles to filtering 267
Vacancy chains 267
Chapter summary 268
Key concepts and terms 268
Suggested reading 268
13 Urban change and conflict 269
Key questions addressed in this chapter 269
13.1 Externality effects 269
The costs of proximity and the price of accessibility 270
Competition and conflict over externalities 270
13.2 Accessibility to services and amenities 272
The aggregate effects of aggregate patterns 273
Amenities, disamenities and social reproduction 274
13.3 Urban restructuring: inequality and conflict 275
Decentralization and accessibility to services and amenities 275
Accessibility and social inequality 276
Redevelopment and renewal 276
Planning problems: the British experience 278
Service sector restructuring 278
Deinstitutionalization and residualization 280
Privatization 280
Workfare 281
Social polarization 284
The informal urban economy 286
Urban social sustainability 288
Chapter summary 292
Key concepts and terms 292
Suggested reading 293
14 Whither urban social geography?:
recent developments 294
Key questions addressed in this chapter 294
14.1 Los Angeles and the California School 295
Critique of the LA School 297
Los Angeles: a paradigmatic city? 298
Contents
14.2 Cinema and the city 300
Films as texts 300
The influence of the city on film 301
The influence of film on the city 301
Film as business 302
Curtisland 303
City branding 303
14.3 Conclusion: whither urban social geography? 305
Chapter summary 305
Key concepts and terms 306
Suggested reading 306
Glossary 307
References 338
Index 355
|
adam_txt |
A guide to using this book xiv
Acknowledgements xv
1 Social geography and the sociospatial
dialectic 1
Key questions addressed in this chapter l
1.1 Different approaches within human geography 2
The quantitative approach 2
The behavioural approach 2
The structuralist approach 2
Poststructuralist approaches 3
The study of urban social geography 3
1.2 The sociospatial dialectic 6
1.3 The macro geographical context 7
A changing context for urban social geography 9
Economic change and urban restructuring 9
The imprint of demographic change 11
The city and cultural change 13
Political change and the sociospatial dialectic 15
Chapter summary 15
Key concepts and terms 16
Suggested reading 16
2 The changing economic context of
city life 19
Key questions addressed in this chapter 19
2.1 The precapitalist, preindustrial city 20
2.2 The growth of the industrial city 23
Early models of the spatial structure of industrial cities 24
Marx and the industrial city 24
V
Fordism and the industrial city 25
Keynesianism and the 'long boom' 26
2.3 The contemporary city 28
Neo Fordism 29
Economic and urban change 31
Postindustrial society 33
Globalization 35
Knowledge economies and the informational city 36
Conclusion 38
Chapter summary 39
Key concepts and terms 39
Suggested reading 40
3 The cultures of cities 4i
Key questions addressed in this chapter 41
3.1 What is culture? 42
The materiality of cultures 42
Shared meanings 42
Diversity and difference 43
Identities 44
3.2 Postcolonial theory and the city 45
Hybridity 45
The social construction of culture 47
3.3 Space, power and culture 48
Foucault and the carceral city 48
The social construction of space 49
Space and identity 50
3.4 Postmodernism 52
Postmodernism in the city 53
The aestheticization of consumption 54
3.5 Conclusions 56
Chapter summary 57
Key concepts and terms 58
Suggested reading 58
4 Patterns of sociospatial differentiation 60
Key questions addressed in this chapter 60
4.1 Urban morphology and the physical structure of cities 61
House types, building lots and street layouts 61
Morphogenesis 64
Contents
Environmental quality 69
Townscapes and the genius loci of the built environment 71
Qualitative methods and observational fieldwork in urban areas 73
4.2 Difference and inequality: socioeconomic and
sociocultural patterns 74
Studies of factorial ecology 78
Factorial ecologies as a product of social structure 81
A historical perspective 82
Patterns of social well being 83
Intra urban variations in the quality of life 85
The geography of deprivation and disadvantage 86
Microsimulation of disadvantage 88
Chapter summary 89
Key concepts and terms 91
Suggested reading 91
5 Spatial and institutional frameworks:
citizens, the state and civil society 92
Key questions addressed in this chapter 92
5.1 The interdependence of public institutions and private life 92
Citizenship, patriarchy and racism 93
The law and civil society 94
The changing nature of urban governance 95
5.2 De jure urban spaces 98
Metropolitan fragmentation and its spatial consequences 98
Fiscal imbalance and sociospatial inequality 99
Fiscal mercantilism 100
Municipal service delivery and sociospatial inequality 101
5.3 The democratic base and its spatial framework 101
The spatial organization of elections 103
Malapportionment and gerrymandering 103
The spatiality of key actors in urban governance: elected officials
and city bureaucrats 104
Bureaucracy and sociospatial (re)production 105
The parapolitical structure 105
Business 106
Labour 106
Citizen organizations and special interest groups 106
Homeowners' associations: private governments 108
Urban social movements 109
5.4 Community power structures and the role of the local state 110
Regime theory 111
Structuralist interpretations of the political economy of
contemporary cities 111
vii
The local state and the sociospatial dialectic 113
Regulation theory and urban governance 113
Redefining citizenship 115
5.5 The question of social justice in the city 116
Chapter summary 118
Key concepts and terms 118
Suggested reading 118
6 Structures of building provision and
the social production of the urban
environment 120
Key questions addressed in this chapter 120
6.1 Housing submarkets 121
The growth of homeownership 122
Homeownership and social polarization 125
The decline of private renting 125
The effects of rent controls 126
The spatial effects of disinvestment 126
The development of public housing 127
Public housing in the United Kingdom 128
Sociospatial differentiation within the public sector 128
The voluntary sector: the 'third arm' of housing provision 132
6.2 Key actors in the social production of the built environment 134
Landowners and morphogenesis 135
Builders, developers and the search for profit 135
Discrimination by design: architects and planners 138
Women's spaces 139
Women's places 139
Mortgage financiers: social and spatial bias as good business
practice 140
Bias against people 140
Bias against property 141
Real estate agents: manipulating and reinforcing neighbourhood
patterns 143
Manipulating social geographies: blockbusting and gentrification 143
Public housing managers: sorting and grading 147
Problem families and dump estates 147
Chapter summary 149
Key concepts and terms 149
Suggested reading 149
Contents
7 The social dimensions of modern
urbanism 151
Key questions addressed in this chapter 151
7.1 Urban life in Western culture 151
7.2 Urbanism and social theory 152
The Chicago School 154
Urbanism as a way of life 154
The public and private worlds of city life 157
The self: identity and experience in private and public worlds 157
7.3 Social interaction and social networks in urban settings 158
Social network analysis 158
Urban ecology as shaper and outcome of social interaction 161
The spatial model 161
Criticisms of the ecological approach 163
Social interaction in urban environments 164
Social distance and physical distance 164
Chapter summary 167
Key concepts and terms 167
Suggested reading 167
8 Segregation and congregation 168
Key questions addressed in this chapter 168
8.1 Social closure, racism and discrimination 168
8.2 The spatial segregation of minority groups 169
Issues of definition and measurement 170
External factors: discrimination and structural effects 172
Congregation: internal group cohesiveness 175
Clustering for defence 175
Clustering for mutual support 175
Clustering for cultural preservation 176
Spaces of resistance: clustering to facilitate 'attacks' 176
Colonies, enclaves and ghettos 178
Illustrative example 1: structural constraints and cultural preservation
in the United Kingdom 182
Illustrative example 2: migrant workers in continental European cities 184
Chapter summary 186
Key concepts and terms 186
Suggested reading 187
ix
9 Neighbourhood, community and the
social construction of place 188
Key questions addressed in this chapter 188
9.1 Neighbourhood and community 189
Urban villages: community saved? 189
The fragility of communality 190
Suburban neighbourhoods: community transformed? 191
Splintering urbanism and the diversity of suburbia 192
Status panic and crisis communality 193
Communities and neighbourhoods: definitions and classifications 193
9.2 The social construction of urban places 194
Urban lifeworlds, time space routinization and intersubjectivity 196
Structuration and the 'becoming' of place 198
Constructing place through spatial practices 199
Place, consumption and cultural politics 202
Habitus 202
9.3 The social meanings of the built environment 203
The appropriation of space and place: symbolism and coded meanings 203
Architecture, aesthetics and the sociospatial dialectic 204
Commodification 206
Architecture and the circulation of capital 206
Chapter summary 208
Key concepts and terms 209
Suggested reading 209
10 Environment and behaviour in
urban settings 210
Key questions addressed in this chapter 210
10.1 Theories about deviant behaviour 211
Determinist theory 212
Crowding theory 214
Design determinism 214
Alienation 215
Compositional theory 215
Subcultural theory 216
Structuralist theory 217
Multifactor explanations: the example of crime and delinquency 219
Data problems 219
The geography of urban crime 220
10.2 Cognition and perception 223
Designative aspects of urban imagery 224
Cognitive distance 227
Contents
Appraisive aspects of urban imagery 227
The cognitive dimensions of the urban environment 227
Images of the home area 228
Chapter summary 230
Key concepts and terms used 230
Suggested reading 230
11 Bodies, sexuality and the city 231
Key questions addressed in this chapter 231
11.1 Gender, heteropatriarchy and the city 232
Gender roles in the sociospatial dialectic 233
11.2 Sexuality and the city 236
Prostitution and the city 236
Urbanization and prostitution 236
Sex workers in contemporary cities 237
Homosexuality and the city 237
The social construction of sexuality 238
Homosexual urban ecology 238
Gay spaces 239
Lesbian spaces 239
Queer politics: lipstick lesbians and gay skinheads 242
11.3 Disability and the city 244
The social construction of disability 245
Disability in urban settings 245
Chapter summary 248
Key concepts and terms 248
Suggested reading 248
12 Residential mobility and neighbourhood
change 250
Key questions addressed in this chapter 250
12.1 Patterns of household mobility 252
Movers and stayers 252
Migration data 253
Patterns of in migration 253
Intra urban moves 254
Distance and direction 254
Household movement and urban ecology 254
The determinants of residential mobility 255
Reasons for moving 255
Space needs and life course changes 255
The decision to move 258
The search for a new residence 261
xi
Specifying the desiderata of a new home 261
Searching for vacancies 262
Time constraints 263
Choosing a new home 264
12.2 Residential mobility and neighbourhood change 264
High status movement, filtering and vacancy chains 266
Obstacles to filtering 267
Vacancy chains 267
Chapter summary 268
Key concepts and terms 268
Suggested reading 268
13 Urban change and conflict 269
Key questions addressed in this chapter 269
13.1 Externality effects 269
The costs of proximity and the price of accessibility 270
Competition and conflict over externalities 270
13.2 Accessibility to services and amenities 272
The aggregate effects of aggregate patterns 273
Amenities, disamenities and social reproduction 274
13.3 Urban restructuring: inequality and conflict 275
Decentralization and accessibility to services and amenities 275
Accessibility and social inequality 276
Redevelopment and renewal 276
Planning problems: the British experience 278
Service sector restructuring 278
Deinstitutionalization and residualization 280
Privatization 280
Workfare 281
Social polarization 284
The informal urban economy 286
Urban social sustainability 288
Chapter summary 292
Key concepts and terms 292
Suggested reading 293
14 Whither urban social geography?:
recent developments 294
Key questions addressed in this chapter 294
14.1 Los Angeles and the'California School' 295
Critique of the LA School 297
Los Angeles: a paradigmatic city? 298
Contents
14.2 Cinema and the city 300
Films as texts 300
The influence of the city on film 301
The influence of film on the city 301
Film as business 302
'Curtisland' 303
City branding 303
14.3 Conclusion: whither urban social geography? 305
Chapter summary 305
Key concepts and terms 306
Suggested reading 306
Glossary 307
References 338
Index 355 |
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id | DE-604.BV021834940 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T15:58:24Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T20:45:44Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780131249448 0131249444 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-015046881 |
oclc_num | 65757901 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-824 DE-20 DE-188 |
owner_facet | DE-824 DE-20 DE-188 |
physical | XVI, 375 S. Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. |
publishDate | 2006 |
publishDateSearch | 2006 |
publishDateSort | 2006 |
publisher | Pearson, Prentice Hall |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Knox, Paul L. 1947- Verfasser (DE-588)123288347 aut Urban social geography an introduction Paul Knox and Steven Pinch 5. ed. Harlow ; Munich [u.a.] Pearson, Prentice Hall 2006 XVI, 375 S. Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Urban geography Sociology, Urban Human geography Sozialgeografie (DE-588)4055768-6 gnd rswk-swf Stadt (DE-588)4056723-0 gnd rswk-swf Stadtsoziologie (DE-588)4077811-3 gnd rswk-swf Stadtsoziologie (DE-588)4077811-3 s DE-604 Sozialgeografie (DE-588)4055768-6 s Stadt (DE-588)4056723-0 s DE-188 Pinch, Steven Verfasser aut HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=015046881&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Knox, Paul L. 1947- Pinch, Steven Urban social geography an introduction Urban geography Sociology, Urban Human geography Sozialgeografie (DE-588)4055768-6 gnd Stadt (DE-588)4056723-0 gnd Stadtsoziologie (DE-588)4077811-3 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4055768-6 (DE-588)4056723-0 (DE-588)4077811-3 |
title | Urban social geography an introduction |
title_auth | Urban social geography an introduction |
title_exact_search | Urban social geography an introduction |
title_exact_search_txtP | Urban social geography an introduction |
title_full | Urban social geography an introduction Paul Knox and Steven Pinch |
title_fullStr | Urban social geography an introduction Paul Knox and Steven Pinch |
title_full_unstemmed | Urban social geography an introduction Paul Knox and Steven Pinch |
title_short | Urban social geography |
title_sort | urban social geography an introduction |
title_sub | an introduction |
topic | Urban geography Sociology, Urban Human geography Sozialgeografie (DE-588)4055768-6 gnd Stadt (DE-588)4056723-0 gnd Stadtsoziologie (DE-588)4077811-3 gnd |
topic_facet | Urban geography Sociology, Urban Human geography Sozialgeografie Stadt Stadtsoziologie |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=015046881&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT knoxpaull urbansocialgeographyanintroduction AT pinchsteven urbansocialgeographyanintroduction |