The urban experience: economics, society, and public policy
Gespeichert in:
Hauptverfasser: | , , |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Oxford [u.a.]
Oxford Univ. Press
2008
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XX, 601 S. 1 CD-ROM (12 cm) |
ISBN: | 9780195313086 |
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a The urban experience |b economics, society, and public policy |c Barry Bluestone, Mary Huff Stevenson, Russell Williams |
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650 | 4 | |a Geschichte | |
650 | 4 | |a Stadt | |
650 | 4 | |a Verstädterung | |
650 | 4 | |a Cities and towns |z United States | |
650 | 4 | |a Urbanization |z United States |x History | |
650 | 4 | |a Urban economics |z United States | |
650 | 4 | |a Sociology, Urban |z United States | |
650 | 4 | |a City and town life |z United States | |
650 | 4 | |a Urban policy |z United States | |
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700 | 1 | |a Williams, Russell |e Verfasser |4 aut | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804137932460654592 |
---|---|
adam_text | Contents
Part I Introduction to Cities and Suburbs
1
The Wonder and Paradox of Urban Life
3
Urban Issues and the Social Science Lens
3
Our Love/Hate Relationship with the City
5
Our Love/Hate Relationship with the Suburbs
6
The Importance of Density
8
Urban Spillovers
8
The Dynamics of Metropolitan Development
9
Weil-Being and Public Policy
12
The Role of Political Power and Interest Groups
13
Paradox and Urban Inquiry
15
Key Issues in Urban Policy
16
The Changing Role of the U.S. City in a Flat World
17
The Tools of the Trade
18
Opportunity Cost
18
The Criteria of Efficiency and Equity
20
Externalities
20
Unintended Consequences
21
Other Important Economic Concepts
22
Questions and Exercises
23
2
How Metro Areas Rank
25
Cities and Their Reputations
25
Defining Metro Areas
27
The Need for Standard Definitions
27
New Definitions
28
Ranking Metropolitan Areas
32
Race and Ethnicity
37
Median Family Income
41
Changes in Median Income over Time
45
Poverty
48
Contents
Additional Measures of Metro Area Well-Being
50
Purchasing Power
50
Affordable Housing and Home Ownership
52
Income Disparity and Inequality
53
Education
53
Environmental Quality
54
Crime
54
Transportation
55
Using Data Wisely
55
Questions and Exercises
56
Part II Dynamics of Metropolitan Development
3
Urban America from the Seventeenth to the Early Twentieth Century:
The Dynamics of City Growth
61
The Geography of Growth: Centripetal and Centrifugal Forces
62
The Era of Water and Steam Power
63
The Era of Railroads, Electricity, and the
Telephone
64
Some Economic Concepts Underlying Urban Growth
65
Trade and Transportation Costs
66
Agglomeration Economies and Density
66
Internal Economies of Scale
68
Size of Consumer Markets
70
Technological Progress
70
Transportation Costs between Nineteenth-Century Cities
73
Weber s Graphical Model of Transportation Costs
76
Other Important Ideas from Weber and from
Isard
78
Transportation Costs within Nineteenth-Century Cities
81
Agglomeration Economies and the Growth of Cities
82
Technological Progress and Innovation
85
Demographic Growth and Change in Urban Areas
86
Internal Migration: From Rural to Urban America
87
Immigration and the Growth of American Cities
90
Annexation and the Growing Size of Cities
94
The Changing Pattern of Urban Population Growth
94
Questions and Exercises
98
4
Cities and Suburbs in the Late Twentieth Century:
The Dynamics of Metropolitan Expansion
100
Formal Models of Urban Growth and Development
101
Understanding Urban Land Values
103
The Basic
Alonso
Model
103
How Does a Bid Rent Curve Get Established?
104
Contents xiü
What
Happens
When There Is More Than One Bid
Rent Curve?
106
Applying the Bid Rent Model to Metro Area Development
108
The Residential Paradox
110
Constrained Choice and Political Factors in Land Values and Location
112
The Evolution of Twentieth-Century U.S. Metropolitan Areas
113
The Decentralization of Business Location
113
Post-World War II Business Location
114
The Rise of the Post-World War II Suburb
116
The Impact of Federal Policies on Suburbanization
117
Class, Race, and Ethnic Segregation in the American City
121
New Immigration and the Cities
123
Cross-Currents of the Late Twentieth Century: Sunbelt Cities,
Edge Cities, and Gentrification
125
The Rise of Sunbelt Cities
125
The Rise of Edge Cities
126
Central Cities and Gentrification
128
Classification of Twentieth-Century Cities
129
The Changing Fortunes of Individual Cities
131
Appendix A: Expansions on the Basic
Alonso
Model
134
Questions and Exercises
140
5
U.S. Metro Areas in the Twenty-First Century:
The New Dynamics of Urban Location
143
The New World Is Hat
143
Weber and the Twenty-First-Century City
146
Expansions on the Basic Weber Model
146
Weber in a World of Declining Transportation and
Communications Costs
147
Alonso
and the Twenty-First-Century City
150
Alonso
in a World of Declining Transportation
and Communications Costs
150
What s Left for the City in the Twenty-First Century?
153
Cities as Centers for Twenty-First-Century Business Services
153
Cites as Centers for Twenty-First-Century Consumption
154
Cultural Amenities versus Economic Factors
155
The Classification and Economic Functions of U.S. Metro Areas in the
Twenty-First Century
156
A Taxonomy of Twenty-First-Century Cities
157
Smart Growth and the New
Urbanism
Movement
161
The New Demographics of the Twenty-First-Century City
162
Gentrification and Income Segregation
163
Young Workers, Empty
Neşters,
and New Immigrants
164
Questions and Exercises
167
x¡v
Contents
Part III Foundations of Metropolitan Area Prosperity
6
Urban Prosperity and the Role of Trade
171
Metro Area Household Incomes
171
A Short Primer on the Economics of Trade
174
Absolute Advantage
174
Comparative Advantage
175
Limitations in the Theory of Comparative Advantage
177
New Trade Theory
178
The Theory of Competitive Advantage
179
Trade and Prosperity
181
Export Base Theory: The Demand Side of the Metropolitan
Area s Economy
182
The Basic/Nonbasic Approach: A Simple Measurement
Technique
184
Job Multipliers
184
Location Quotients
185
Limitations of the Basic/Nonbasic Approach
186
Input-Output Analysis: A More Complex Measurement
Technique
187
Limitations of the Input-Output Measurement Technique
187
Limitations of the Demand-Side Focus
188
Shifting the Focus from the Demand Side to the
Supply Side
188
The Supply Side:
A
Long-Term
Perspective
189
Interactions between the Demand Side and the
Supply Side
190
Strategies for Less Resilient Metropolitan Areas
191
Competitive Advantage in Inner-City Neighborhoods
192
Understanding Metro Area Prosperity in Light of
Economic Theory
192
The Case of Detroit
193
The Case of Hartford
193
The Case of Boston
194
The Case of Chicago, Milwaukee, and Buffalo
195
Newly Prosperous Metro Regions
195
Appendix A: Input-Output Calculations
199
Questions and Exercises
203
7
Urban Labor Markets and Metro Prosperity
206
Employment and Unemployment
207
Where Are the Good Jobs?
209
Labor Market Earnings by Metro Area
211
Occupational Wage Differentials across Metro Areas
214
Contents xv
Occupational Wage Differentials
between Occupations
across
Metro
Areas
216
Understanding Wage Differentials
218
Human Capital
219
Market Power and Barriers to Mobility
220
Racial and Ethnic Discrimination
222
Spatial Mismatch
224
Skills Mismatch
228
Spatial Mismatch, Deindustrialization, Education,
and Race
230
The Role of Unions
232
Immigration
235
Explaining Metro Area Earnings Differentials
236
Labor Markets and Urban Prosperity
238
Appendix A: The Sources of Personal Income
239
Appendix B: The Simple Labor Market
242
Questions and Exercises
244
8
Urban Public Education and Metro Prosperity
247
The Decentralized U.S. Educational System
248
The Importance of Schooling in Modern Society
249
Variation in Educational Attainment across Metro Areas
250
Educational Attainment and Metro Area Income
254
Education, New Growth Theory, and the Well-Being of Cities
and Suburbs
254
New Growth Theory
255
Education and Urban Economic Development
256
Education Production Functions
257
Variation in School Spending
258
Does Spending Matter?
261
Where Teachers Teach
262
School Tracking and Curriculum Choice
263
What Really Counts in School Performance
264
An Expanded Education Production Function
264
Educational Success: The Empirical Record
266
Challenges Facing Urban School Systems
267
Racial Segregation and Educational Achievement
268
Urban Schools and Reform of School Structure
271
Magnet Schools, Charter Schools, and For-Profit Schools
272
Educational Standards and No Child Left Behind
275
School Choice and Voucher Programs
276
Do These School Reforms Work?
277
Questions and Exercises
282
xv¡
Contents
Part IV Current Policy Issues in Metropolitan Areas
9
The Urban Public Sector
287
Government s Economic Role in Metro Areas
287
How the Private Market Is Supposed to Work
288
Supply and Demand in the Private Sector
289
Market Failure and the Public Sector
291
Market Power
291
Information Problems
293
Negative and Positive Externalities
294
Pollution: A Negative Externality
294
Elementary and Secondary Education: A Positive Externality
295
Pure Public Goods
296
Government and the Distribution of Weil-Being
298
The Debate over the Scope of Government Intervention
299
Market Failure and the Alternatives for Providing Goods
and Services
301
Regulated Private Markets
301
Public Funding/Private Provision
302
Public Provision
302
Local Government Employment and Spending Patterns
303
Privatization
305
Paying for Government Services
307
Income and Sales Taxes Levied by Local Governments
309
Pricing in the Public Sector
309
A Primer on the Economics of Building and Paying for Bridges
310
Scenario
1:
Uncrowded Bridge Used by a Cross-Section of
the Population
311
Scenario
2:
Uncrowded Bridge Used Primarily by Higher-Income
Households
311
Scenario
3:
Crowded Bridge
312
User Fees
313
The Tiebout Hypothesis
313
Limitations in the Tiebout Hypothesis
314
Metropolitanism
316
Individuals, Interest Groups, and Values
316
Public Choice Theory
317
Interest Groups and Elites
317
Incrementalism
318
Regime Theory and Growth Machines
319
The Challenge of Public-Sector Decision Making
320
Appendix A: Negative Externalities
322
Appendix B: Positive Externalities
324
Questions and Exercises
328
Contents xvü
10
Urban Physical Infrastructure: Water, Sewer, and Waste;
Parks and Libraries; Transportation
331
Combating Disease and Death
331
Density and the Spread of Epidemics
332
Water Supply Systems
334
From Private to Public Operation
334
Solid Waste Management
336
The First Municipal Garbage Systems
336
Coping with Mountains of Trash
338
Urban Wastewater and Sewers
340
Urban Sewer Systems
341
New Challenges to Urban Sewer Systems
342
Urban Public Amenities: Public Libraries and Pastoral
Parks
345
Social Unrest and the Provision of Urban Public
Amenities
346
A Failure of Expectations
348
Transportation: Roads and Rails in Metro Areas
348
What Consumers Want: The Demand Side of Metropolitan
Transportation
350
Travel Trends
350
The Journey to Work
354
Externalities and Mass-Transit Subsidies
355
The Supply Side of Metropolitan Transportation
358
Issues in Contemporary Metropolitan Transportation
Policy
360
Short-Run Issues: Getting Prices Right
360
Long-Run Issues: Deciding on Future Transportation
Infrastructure Investment
364
Transportation Equity Issues
365
Questions and Exercises
368
11
Urban Social Infrastructure: Public Health, Public Safety,
and Public Welfare Policy
372
The Provision of Public Health Services
372
Local Public Health Departments
373
Personal Health Care: Hospitals and Health Centers
374
Health Care for the Poor
376
Health Disparities in the Metro Region
377
Why Are Health Disparities So Prevalent?
378
Health Disparities between Neighborhoods
380
Urban Public Health in a Global Context: Epidemics,
Bioterrorism,
and Homeland Security
381
xviii Contents
Urban
Police 382
The Impact of Demographic Change on Police
383
Transformation in the Structure and Responsibilities of Urban
Police Departments
385
Crime Prevention in Urban Settings: From Twentieth- to
Twenty-First-Century Paradigms
386
Community Policing versus Traditional Approaches
386
Twenty-First-Century Public Safety Issues: Private Security,
Internet-Based Crime, and Homeland Security
389
Fire Departments and Emergency Medical Services
390
Emergency Medical Services
392
Urban Social Welfare
392
Ameliorating Living Conditions in Poor Neighborhoods
394
Questions and Exercises
397
12
Urban Housing Markets, Residential Location,
and Housing Policy
401
The Housing Consumer: The Price of an Individual Home
401
Attributes Theory and Hedonic Prices
403
Budget Constraints and Housing Preferences
404
Home Ownership versus Rental Housing
406
The Role of Government Incentives for Home
Ownership
407
Trends in Home Ownership
408
Household Income and the Individual s Housing Demand
409
The Urban/Metro Housing Market
411
What Drives Metro Area Housing Prices: Supply
and Demand
414
Housing Affordability
417
Housing Prices and Vacancy Rates
417
The Impact of Housing Prices on Local Employment and Population
Growth
421
Housing Prices and Employment Growth
424
Housing Prices and Population Migration
426
Post-World War II Suburbanization and Residential
Segregation
428
Measuring Segregation
429
The Causes of Housing Segregation
429
Segregation and Social-Class Structure
431
Concentrated Poverty in the Inner City
432
Federal Housing Policy
433
Subsidizing Housing Demand
434
Subsidizing Housing Supply
435
State and Local Housing Policy
436
Contents xix
Rent Control
438
The Unintended Short-Run Consequences of Rent Control
438
The Unintended Long-Run Consequences of Rent Control
439
Intervening in Housing Markets: A Word of Caution
442
Appendix A: Indifference Curves and Budget Constraints
443
Questions and Exercises
446
13
Land-Use Controls, Sprawl, and Smart Growth
451
Land-Use Restrictions and Zoning
452
The Power of Eminent Domain
453
The Power to Enact Zoning Regulations
454
Houston s Alternative to Zoning
456
Underzoning and Overzoning
458
Equity Issues in Zoning
460
Zoning and Metropolitan Sprawl
462
What s Wrong with Sprawl?
463
Urban Sprawl and Commuting Times
463
The Debate about Sprawl
467
Measuring Sprawl
468
Generating Sprawl: Market Forces and Public Policy
473
Reducing Sprawl: Market Forces and Public Policy
474
Smart Growth
475
Barriers to Smart Growth Implementation
476
Equity and Efficiency Considerations in Alternative
Metropolitan Growth Scenarios
477
Land-Use Controls and Spatial Form
478
Questions and Exercises
481
14
Urban Economic Development Strategies
483
Deindustrialization and Firm Relocation
483
Deindustrialization in the
1970s 485
Continuing Deindustrialization
486
Goals of Economic Development
486
Location from the Business Perspective
488
Public Policy, Economic Development, and Firm Location
490
Reducing Capital Costs
(r x K)
491
Reducing Labor Costs (w
x L)
493
Reducing Raw Materials, Natural Resources, and Transportation
Costs (pn
x N),
Cs
494
Reducing Taxes (T)
495
Streamlining Regulations (R)
497
Increasing Social Amenities
499
What Works?
500
Increasing a Firm s Total Revenue
502
xx
Contents
Reducing a Firm s Capital Costs
503
Reducing Labor Costs/Increasing Skills and Education
505
Public Provision of Transportation and Land
507
Industrial Parks and Eminent Domain
508
Reducing State and Local Taxes
508
Streamlining Regulations and Enterprise Zones
509
Building Convention Centers and Sports Stadiums
510
Why Do Cities Pursue Economic Development Strategies with Such Low
Payoffs?
511
What Should City Leaders and Policy Makers Do to Play
the Economic Development Game Better?
513
Appendix A: Cost-Benefit Analysis
515
Questions and Exercises
521
15
Urban Well-Being, Civility, and Civic Engagement
in the Twenty-First Century
523
What Do We Want from Our Neighborhoods
and How Do We Get It?
523
The Tiebout Hypothesis and the Privatization of Public Space
524
Gated Communities and the Avoidance of Disamenities
526
Dissatisfied Citizens and Their Choices: Exit versus Voice
527
How Do We Create Better Communities?
529
The Role of Social Capital and Civic Engagement
530
Social Capital, Suburbanization, and Sprawl
532
Social Capital and Neighborhood Form
532
Recent Empirical Work on Communities and Social Capital
534
Neighborhood Form and Crime Reduction
535
The Effect of Social Capital on the Lives of the Most Vulnerable
536
Central City Renaissance
538
Regeneration for Whom? Rebuilding Central City Neighborhoods
541
The Role of Community Development Corporations
542
Demographic Change and Low-Income Communities
544
The Perils of Success
544
Questions and Exercises
547
Glossary
549
Index
583
CD-ROM Instructions
601
|
adam_txt |
Contents
Part I Introduction to Cities and Suburbs
1
The Wonder and Paradox of Urban Life
3
Urban Issues and the Social Science Lens
3
Our Love/Hate Relationship with the City
5
Our Love/Hate Relationship with the Suburbs
6
The Importance of Density
8
Urban Spillovers
8
The Dynamics of Metropolitan Development
9
Weil-Being and Public Policy
12
The Role of Political Power and Interest Groups
13
Paradox and Urban Inquiry
15
Key Issues in Urban Policy
16
The Changing Role of the U.S. City in a "Flat" World
17
The Tools of the Trade
18
Opportunity Cost
18
The Criteria of Efficiency and Equity
20
Externalities
20
Unintended Consequences
21
Other Important Economic Concepts
22
Questions and Exercises
23
2
How Metro Areas Rank
25
Cities and Their Reputations
25
Defining Metro Areas
27
The Need for Standard Definitions
27
New Definitions
28
Ranking Metropolitan Areas
32
Race and Ethnicity
37
Median Family Income
41
Changes in Median Income over Time
45
Poverty
48
Contents
Additional Measures of Metro Area Well-Being
50
Purchasing Power
50
Affordable Housing and Home Ownership
52
Income Disparity and Inequality
53
Education
53
Environmental Quality
54
Crime
54
Transportation
55
Using Data Wisely
55
Questions and Exercises
56
Part II Dynamics of Metropolitan Development
3
Urban America from the Seventeenth to the Early Twentieth Century:
The Dynamics of City Growth
61
The Geography of Growth: Centripetal and Centrifugal Forces
62
The Era of Water and Steam Power
63
The Era of Railroads, Electricity, and the
Telephone
64
Some Economic Concepts Underlying Urban Growth
65
Trade and Transportation Costs
66
Agglomeration Economies and Density
66
Internal Economies of Scale
68
Size of Consumer Markets
70
Technological Progress
70
Transportation Costs between Nineteenth-Century Cities
73
Weber's Graphical Model of Transportation Costs
76
Other Important Ideas from Weber and from
Isard
78
Transportation Costs within Nineteenth-Century Cities
81
Agglomeration Economies and the Growth of Cities
82
Technological Progress and Innovation
85
Demographic Growth and Change in Urban Areas
86
Internal Migration: From Rural to Urban America
87
Immigration and the Growth of American Cities
90
Annexation and the Growing Size of Cities
94
The Changing Pattern of Urban Population Growth
94
Questions and Exercises
98
4
Cities and Suburbs in the Late Twentieth Century:
The Dynamics of Metropolitan Expansion
100
Formal Models of Urban Growth and Development
101
Understanding Urban Land Values
103
The Basic
Alonso
Model
103
How Does a Bid Rent Curve Get Established?
104
Contents xiü
What
Happens
When There Is More Than One Bid
Rent Curve?
106
Applying the Bid Rent Model to Metro Area Development
108
The Residential Paradox
110
Constrained Choice and Political Factors in Land Values and Location
112
The Evolution of Twentieth-Century U.S. Metropolitan Areas
113
The Decentralization of Business Location
113
Post-World War II Business Location
114
The Rise of the Post-World War II Suburb
116
The Impact of Federal Policies on Suburbanization
117
Class, Race, and Ethnic Segregation in the American City
121
New Immigration and the Cities
123
Cross-Currents of the Late Twentieth Century: Sunbelt Cities,
Edge Cities, and Gentrification
125
The Rise of Sunbelt Cities
125
The Rise of Edge Cities
126
Central Cities and Gentrification
128
Classification of Twentieth-Century Cities
129
The Changing Fortunes of Individual Cities
131
Appendix A: Expansions on the Basic
Alonso
Model
134
Questions and Exercises
140
5
U.S. Metro Areas in the Twenty-First Century:
The New Dynamics of Urban Location
143
The New World Is "Hat"
143
Weber and the Twenty-First-Century City
146
Expansions on the Basic Weber Model
146
Weber in a World of Declining Transportation and
Communications Costs
147
Alonso
and the Twenty-First-Century City
150
Alonso
in a World of Declining Transportation
and Communications Costs
150
What's Left for the City in the Twenty-First Century?
153
Cities as Centers for Twenty-First-Century Business Services
153
Cites as Centers for Twenty-First-Century Consumption
154
Cultural Amenities versus Economic Factors
155
The Classification and Economic Functions of U.S. Metro Areas in the
Twenty-First Century
156
A Taxonomy of Twenty-First-Century Cities
157
Smart Growth and the New
Urbanism
Movement
161
The New Demographics of the Twenty-First-Century City
162
Gentrification and Income Segregation
163
Young Workers, Empty
Neşters,
and New Immigrants
164
Questions and Exercises
167
x¡v
Contents
Part III Foundations of Metropolitan Area Prosperity
6
Urban Prosperity and the Role of Trade
171
Metro Area Household Incomes
171
A Short Primer on the Economics of Trade
174
Absolute Advantage
174
Comparative Advantage
175
Limitations in the Theory of Comparative Advantage
177
New Trade Theory
178
The Theory of Competitive Advantage
179
Trade and Prosperity
181
Export Base Theory: The Demand Side of the Metropolitan
Area's Economy
182
The Basic/Nonbasic Approach: A Simple Measurement
Technique
184
Job Multipliers
184
Location Quotients
185
Limitations of the Basic/Nonbasic Approach
186
Input-Output Analysis: A More Complex Measurement
Technique
187
Limitations of the Input-Output Measurement Technique
187
Limitations of the Demand-Side Focus
188
Shifting the Focus from the Demand Side to the
Supply Side
188
The Supply Side:
A
Long-Term
Perspective
189
Interactions between the Demand Side and the
Supply Side
190
Strategies for Less Resilient Metropolitan Areas
191
Competitive Advantage in Inner-City Neighborhoods
192
Understanding Metro Area Prosperity in Light of
Economic Theory
192
The Case of Detroit
193
The Case of Hartford
193
The Case of Boston
194
The Case of Chicago, Milwaukee, and Buffalo
195
Newly Prosperous Metro Regions
195
Appendix A: Input-Output Calculations
199
Questions and Exercises
203
7
Urban Labor Markets and Metro Prosperity
206
Employment and Unemployment
207
Where Are the Good Jobs?
209
Labor Market Earnings by Metro Area
211
Occupational Wage Differentials across Metro Areas
214
Contents xv
Occupational Wage Differentials
between Occupations
across
Metro
Areas
216
Understanding Wage Differentials
218
Human Capital
219
Market Power and Barriers to Mobility
220
Racial and Ethnic Discrimination
222
Spatial Mismatch
224
Skills Mismatch
228
Spatial Mismatch, Deindustrialization, Education,
and Race
230
The Role of Unions
232
Immigration
235
Explaining Metro Area Earnings Differentials
236
Labor Markets and Urban Prosperity
238
Appendix A: The Sources of Personal Income
239
Appendix B: The Simple Labor Market
242
Questions and Exercises
244
8
Urban Public Education and Metro Prosperity
247
The Decentralized U.S. Educational System
248
The Importance of Schooling in Modern Society
249
Variation in Educational Attainment across Metro Areas
250
Educational Attainment and Metro Area Income
254
Education, New Growth Theory, and the Well-Being of Cities
and Suburbs
254
New Growth Theory
255
Education and Urban Economic Development
256
Education Production Functions
257
Variation in School Spending
258
Does Spending Matter?
261
Where Teachers Teach
262
School Tracking and Curriculum Choice
263
What Really Counts in School Performance
264
An Expanded Education Production Function
264
Educational Success: The Empirical Record
266
Challenges Facing Urban School Systems
267
Racial Segregation and Educational Achievement
268
Urban Schools and Reform of School Structure
271
Magnet Schools, Charter Schools, and For-Profit Schools
272
Educational Standards and "No Child Left Behind"
275
School Choice and Voucher Programs
276
Do These School Reforms Work?
277
Questions and Exercises
282
xv¡
Contents
Part IV Current Policy Issues in Metropolitan Areas
9
The Urban Public Sector
287
Government's Economic Role in Metro Areas
287
How the Private Market Is Supposed to Work
288
Supply and Demand in the Private Sector
289
Market Failure and the Public Sector
291
Market Power
291
Information Problems
293
Negative and Positive Externalities
294
Pollution: A Negative Externality
294
Elementary and Secondary Education: A Positive Externality
295
Pure Public Goods
296
Government and the Distribution of Weil-Being
298
The Debate over the Scope of Government Intervention
299
Market Failure and the Alternatives for Providing Goods
and Services
301
Regulated Private Markets
301
Public Funding/Private Provision
302
Public Provision
302
Local Government Employment and Spending Patterns
303
Privatization
305
Paying for Government Services
307
Income and Sales Taxes Levied by Local Governments
309
Pricing in the Public Sector
309
A Primer on the Economics of Building and Paying for Bridges
310
Scenario
1:
Uncrowded Bridge Used by a Cross-Section of
the Population
311
Scenario
2:
Uncrowded Bridge Used Primarily by Higher-Income
Households
311
Scenario
3:
Crowded Bridge
312
User Fees
313
The Tiebout Hypothesis
313
Limitations in the Tiebout Hypothesis
314
Metropolitanism
316
Individuals, Interest Groups, and Values
316
Public Choice Theory
317
Interest Groups and Elites
317
Incrementalism
318
Regime Theory and Growth Machines
319
The Challenge of Public-Sector Decision Making
320
Appendix A: Negative Externalities
322
Appendix B: Positive Externalities
324
Questions and Exercises
328
Contents xvü
10
Urban Physical Infrastructure: Water, Sewer, and Waste;
Parks and Libraries; Transportation
331
Combating Disease and Death
331
Density and the Spread of Epidemics
332
Water Supply Systems
334
From Private to Public Operation
334
Solid Waste Management
336
The First Municipal Garbage Systems
336
Coping with Mountains of Trash
338
Urban Wastewater and Sewers
340
Urban Sewer Systems
341
New Challenges to Urban Sewer Systems
342
Urban Public Amenities: Public Libraries and Pastoral
Parks
345
Social Unrest and the Provision of Urban Public
Amenities
346
A Failure of Expectations
348
Transportation: Roads and Rails in Metro Areas
348
What Consumers Want: The Demand Side of Metropolitan
Transportation
350
Travel Trends
350
The Journey to Work
354
Externalities and Mass-Transit Subsidies
355
The Supply Side of Metropolitan Transportation
358
Issues in Contemporary Metropolitan Transportation
Policy
360
Short-Run Issues: Getting Prices Right
360
Long-Run Issues: Deciding on Future Transportation
Infrastructure Investment
364
Transportation Equity Issues
365
Questions and Exercises
368
11
Urban Social Infrastructure: Public Health, Public Safety,
and Public Welfare Policy
372
The Provision of Public Health Services
372
Local Public Health Departments
373
Personal Health Care: Hospitals and Health Centers
374
Health Care for the Poor
376
Health Disparities in the Metro Region
377
Why Are Health Disparities So Prevalent?
378
Health Disparities between Neighborhoods
380
Urban Public Health in a Global Context: Epidemics,
Bioterrorism,
and Homeland Security
381
xviii Contents
Urban
Police 382
The Impact of Demographic Change on Police
383
Transformation in the Structure and Responsibilities of Urban
Police Departments
385
Crime Prevention in Urban Settings: From Twentieth- to
Twenty-First-Century Paradigms
386
Community Policing versus Traditional Approaches
386
Twenty-First-Century Public Safety Issues: Private Security,
Internet-Based Crime, and Homeland Security
389
Fire Departments and Emergency Medical Services
390
Emergency Medical Services
392
Urban Social Welfare
392
Ameliorating Living Conditions in Poor Neighborhoods
394
Questions and Exercises
397
12
Urban Housing Markets, Residential Location,
and Housing Policy
401
The Housing Consumer: The Price of an Individual Home
401
Attributes Theory and Hedonic Prices
403
Budget Constraints and Housing Preferences
404
Home Ownership versus Rental Housing
406
The Role of Government Incentives for Home
Ownership
407
Trends in Home Ownership
408
Household Income and the Individual's Housing Demand
409
The Urban/Metro Housing Market
411
What Drives Metro Area Housing Prices: Supply
and Demand
414
Housing "Affordability"
417
Housing Prices and Vacancy Rates
417
The Impact of Housing Prices on Local Employment and Population
Growth
421
Housing Prices and Employment Growth
424
Housing Prices and Population Migration
426
Post-World War II Suburbanization and Residential
Segregation
428
Measuring Segregation
429
The Causes of Housing Segregation
429
Segregation and Social-Class Structure
431
Concentrated Poverty in the Inner City
432
Federal Housing Policy
433
Subsidizing Housing Demand
434
Subsidizing Housing Supply
435
State and Local Housing Policy
436
Contents xix
Rent Control
438
The Unintended Short-Run Consequences of Rent Control
438
The Unintended Long-Run Consequences of Rent Control
439
Intervening in Housing Markets: A Word of Caution
442
Appendix A: Indifference Curves and Budget Constraints
443
Questions and Exercises
446
13
Land-Use Controls, Sprawl, and Smart Growth
451
Land-Use Restrictions and Zoning
452
The Power of Eminent Domain
453
The Power to Enact Zoning Regulations
454
Houston's Alternative to Zoning
456
Underzoning and Overzoning
458
Equity Issues in Zoning
460
Zoning and Metropolitan Sprawl
462
What's Wrong with Sprawl?
463
Urban Sprawl and Commuting Times
463
The Debate about Sprawl
467
Measuring Sprawl
468
Generating Sprawl: Market Forces and Public Policy
473
Reducing Sprawl: Market Forces and Public Policy
474
Smart Growth
475
Barriers to Smart Growth Implementation
476
Equity and Efficiency Considerations in Alternative
Metropolitan Growth Scenarios
477
Land-Use Controls and Spatial Form
478
Questions and Exercises
481
14
Urban Economic Development Strategies
483
Deindustrialization and Firm Relocation
483
Deindustrialization in the
1970s 485
Continuing Deindustrialization
486
Goals of Economic Development
486
Location from the Business Perspective
488
Public Policy, Economic Development, and Firm Location
490
Reducing Capital Costs
(r x K)
491
Reducing Labor Costs (w
x L)
493
Reducing Raw Materials, Natural Resources, and Transportation
Costs (pn
x N),
Cs
494
Reducing Taxes (T)
495
Streamlining Regulations (R)
497
Increasing Social Amenities
499
What Works?
500
Increasing a Firm's Total Revenue
502
xx
Contents
Reducing a Firm's Capital Costs
503
Reducing Labor Costs/Increasing Skills and Education
505
Public Provision of Transportation and Land
507
Industrial Parks and Eminent Domain
508
Reducing State and Local Taxes
508
Streamlining Regulations and Enterprise Zones
509
Building Convention Centers and Sports Stadiums
510
Why Do Cities Pursue Economic Development Strategies with Such Low
Payoffs?
511
What Should City Leaders and Policy Makers Do to Play
the Economic Development Game Better?
513
Appendix A: Cost-Benefit Analysis
515
Questions and Exercises
521
15
Urban Well-Being, Civility, and Civic Engagement
in the Twenty-First Century
523
What Do We Want from Our Neighborhoods
and How Do We Get It?
523
The Tiebout Hypothesis and the Privatization of Public Space
524
Gated Communities and the Avoidance of Disamenities
526
Dissatisfied Citizens and Their Choices: Exit versus Voice
527
How Do We Create Better Communities?
529
The Role of Social Capital and Civic Engagement
530
Social Capital, Suburbanization, and Sprawl
532
Social Capital and Neighborhood Form
532
Recent Empirical Work on Communities and Social Capital
534
Neighborhood Form and Crime Reduction
535
The Effect of Social Capital on the Lives of the Most Vulnerable
536
Central City Renaissance
538
Regeneration for Whom? Rebuilding Central City Neighborhoods
541
The Role of Community Development Corporations
542
Demographic Change and Low-Income Communities
544
The Perils of Success
544
Questions and Exercises
547
Glossary
549
Index
583
CD-ROM Instructions
601 |
any_adam_object | 1 |
any_adam_object_boolean | 1 |
author | Bluestone, Barry 1944- Stevenson, Mary H. Williams, Russell |
author_GND | (DE-588)136482988 |
author_facet | Bluestone, Barry 1944- Stevenson, Mary H. Williams, Russell |
author_role | aut aut aut |
author_sort | Bluestone, Barry 1944- |
author_variant | b b bb m h s mh mhs r w rw |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV035011465 |
callnumber-first | H - Social Science |
callnumber-label | HT123 |
callnumber-raw | HT123 |
callnumber-search | HT123 |
callnumber-sort | HT 3123 |
callnumber-subject | HT - Communities, Classes, Races |
classification_rvk | QY 300 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)181910116 (DE-599)BVBBV035011465 |
dewey-full | 307.760973 |
dewey-hundreds | 300 - Social sciences |
dewey-ones | 307 - Communities |
dewey-raw | 307.760973 |
dewey-search | 307.760973 |
dewey-sort | 3307.760973 |
dewey-tens | 300 - Social sciences |
discipline | Soziologie Wirtschaftswissenschaften |
discipline_str_mv | Soziologie Wirtschaftswissenschaften |
format | Book |
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genre_facet | Lehrbuch |
geographic | USA USA (DE-588)4078704-7 gnd |
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id | DE-604.BV035011465 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T21:43:57Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T21:20:09Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780195313086 |
language | English |
lccn | 2007046158 |
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physical | XX, 601 S. 1 CD-ROM (12 cm) |
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publisher | Oxford Univ. Press |
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spelling | Bluestone, Barry 1944- Verfasser (DE-588)136482988 aut The urban experience economics, society, and public policy Barry Bluestone, Mary Huff Stevenson, Russell Williams Oxford [u.a.] Oxford Univ. Press 2008 XX, 601 S. 1 CD-ROM (12 cm) txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Geschichte Stadt Verstädterung Cities and towns United States Urbanization United States History Urban economics United States Sociology, Urban United States City and town life United States Urban policy United States Stadtökonomie (DE-588)4182752-1 gnd rswk-swf Kommunalpolitik (DE-588)4073648-9 gnd rswk-swf Stadt (DE-588)4056723-0 gnd rswk-swf Sozialgeografie (DE-588)4055768-6 gnd rswk-swf USA USA (DE-588)4078704-7 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4123623-3 Lehrbuch gnd-content USA (DE-588)4078704-7 g Stadt (DE-588)4056723-0 s Sozialgeografie (DE-588)4055768-6 s Kommunalpolitik (DE-588)4073648-9 s DE-604 Stadtökonomie (DE-588)4182752-1 s b DE-604 Stevenson, Mary H. Verfasser aut Williams, Russell Verfasser aut Digitalisierung UB Regensburg application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016680711&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Bluestone, Barry 1944- Stevenson, Mary H. Williams, Russell The urban experience economics, society, and public policy Geschichte Stadt Verstädterung Cities and towns United States Urbanization United States History Urban economics United States Sociology, Urban United States City and town life United States Urban policy United States Stadtökonomie (DE-588)4182752-1 gnd Kommunalpolitik (DE-588)4073648-9 gnd Stadt (DE-588)4056723-0 gnd Sozialgeografie (DE-588)4055768-6 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4182752-1 (DE-588)4073648-9 (DE-588)4056723-0 (DE-588)4055768-6 (DE-588)4078704-7 (DE-588)4123623-3 |
title | The urban experience economics, society, and public policy |
title_auth | The urban experience economics, society, and public policy |
title_exact_search | The urban experience economics, society, and public policy |
title_exact_search_txtP | The urban experience economics, society, and public policy |
title_full | The urban experience economics, society, and public policy Barry Bluestone, Mary Huff Stevenson, Russell Williams |
title_fullStr | The urban experience economics, society, and public policy Barry Bluestone, Mary Huff Stevenson, Russell Williams |
title_full_unstemmed | The urban experience economics, society, and public policy Barry Bluestone, Mary Huff Stevenson, Russell Williams |
title_short | The urban experience |
title_sort | the urban experience economics society and public policy |
title_sub | economics, society, and public policy |
topic | Geschichte Stadt Verstädterung Cities and towns United States Urbanization United States History Urban economics United States Sociology, Urban United States City and town life United States Urban policy United States Stadtökonomie (DE-588)4182752-1 gnd Kommunalpolitik (DE-588)4073648-9 gnd Stadt (DE-588)4056723-0 gnd Sozialgeografie (DE-588)4055768-6 gnd |
topic_facet | Geschichte Stadt Verstädterung Cities and towns United States Urbanization United States History Urban economics United States Sociology, Urban United States City and town life United States Urban policy United States Stadtökonomie Kommunalpolitik Sozialgeografie USA Lehrbuch |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016680711&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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