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020 9781118608500|q(electronic bk.)
020 |z9781405189798
035 (MiAaPQ)EBC1895507
035 (Au-PeEL)EBL1895507
035 (CaPaEBR)ebr11017932
035 (CaONFJC)MIL726244
035 (OCoLC)897001852
040 MiAaPQ|beng|erda|epn|cMiAaPQ|dMiAaPQ
050 4 GF125 .J66 2015
082 0 307.76
100 1 Jonas, Andrew E. G
245 10 Urban Geography :|bA Critical Introduction
250 1st ed
264 1 Chicester :|bJohn Wiley & Sons, Incorporated,|c2015
264 4 |c©2013
300 1 online resource (380 pages)
336 text|btxt|2rdacontent
337 computer|bc|2rdamedia
338 online resource|bcr|2rdacarrier
490 1 Critical Introductions to Geography Ser
505 0 Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- List
of Figures -- List of Tables -- List of Boxes --
Acknowledgments -- Preface -- Chapter 1 Approaching the
City -- 1.1 Introduction -- Bright lights, big city --
Academic approaches -- 1.2 Being Geographical, Being
Urbanist -- Defining "the urban" as an object of study --
1.3 Approaching Cities as Processes: Urbanization and
Development, Urbanism, and Planning -- Urbanization and
development -- Urbanism -- Planning -- Summary -- 1.4
Urban Geography: Foundational Approaches -- Before there
was Urban Geography: The Chicago School -- Urban geography,
from the Chicago School to the quantitative revolution --
1.5 Conclusion: Building on our Foundations -- 1.6 Further
Reading -- Chapter 2 Cities for Whom? The Contours
and Commitments of Critical Urban Geography -- 2.1
Introduction -- 2.2 Developing Critical Urban Theories and
Concepts -- Gentrification and the "rent gap" as critical
concepts -- Being critical by combining the abstract and
the concrete -- 2.3 Social Relevance and Public Action --
Public urban geographies and the right to the city --
Occupying urban space and urban political discourse -- 2.4
Ordinary Urbanism in a World of Cities -- Critical
geographies beyond the academy -- Critical geographies
beyond the global North: Ordinariness, difference,and
decentering urban theory -- 2.5 Positively Different,
Positively Critical -- 2.6 Further Reading -- Chapter 3
Production, Economy, and the City -- 3.1 Introduction --
3.2 Urbanization and the Regional Dynamics of the
Production System -- Accumulation, urbanization, and
capitalist development -- Urban development under mass
production -- 3.3 Patterns and Processes of Urban and
Regional Development after Fordism -- 3.4 Globalization as
regional urbanization -- Uneven regional development in
the United Kingdom
505 8 Racism and uneven urban development: the case of redlining
-- 3.5 Gentrification: The Economic Revival of the Inner
City? -- 3.6 Summary and Conclusions -- 3.7 Further
Reading -- Chapter 4 A World of Cities -- 4.1 Introduction
-- 4.2 There is Nothing New About Global Cities -- 4.3
Cities in the Contemporary World: The Global Cities
Literature -- Economic command, control, and connection,
post-1970 -- Specifying "globalness": Advanced producer
services and the command and control of the global economy
-- Measuring and mapping command, control, and connections
-- 4.4 Beyond a "Citadel Geography": The Critique of the
Dominant Global Cities Approach -- 4.5 Toward Critical
Geographies of Ordinary Urbanism: Researching a World of
Cities -- Ordinary urbanism on the move -- 4.6 Conclusion
-- 4.7 Further Reading -- Chapter 5 Labor and the City --
5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 Why your Labor Matters: Making a
Living in the City -- 5.3 The Control and Segmentation of
Labor in the Industrial City -- The control and
segregation of labor in the new international division of
labor -- 5.4 The Urban Labor Market: Dynamic Dependencies
Between Employers and Workers -- 5.5 Welfare-to-Work and
the Rise of Contingent Labor in the City -- 5.6 Resisting
Urban Economic Change: Labor and Community Coalitions --
Contesting deindustrialization in Chicago -- Living wage
campaigns in London -- 5.7 Summary and Conclusion -- 5.8
Further Reading -- Chapter 6 The City and Social
Reproduction -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Defining the
Gendered Spaces of Social Reproduction -- Women's work,
love, and the social reproduction of capitalism -- 6.3
Social Reproduction and Urban Form -- Social reproduction
and urban form in Kolkata, India -- 6.4 Changing Spaces of
Social Reproduction -- The case of public housing in the
United States -- The case of undocumented migrant life in
the United States
505 8 The case of structural adjustment in Kingston, Jamaica --
6.5 Summary -- 6.6 Further Reading -- Chapter 7 Governing
the City The State, Urban Planning, and Politics -- 7.1
Introduction -- 7.2 Capitalist Urbanization: Planning,
Social Provision, and the Housing Question -- The
provision of housing -- 7.3 Urban Entrepreneurialism and
the New Urban Politics -- Entrepreneurial urban policies -
- 7.4 Suburban Development and Metropolitan Political
Fragmentation -- Edge cities and postsuburban space --
Gated communities -- 7.5 De Facto Urban Policy and the
Rise of City-Regionalism -- 7.6 Summary and Conclusions --
7.7 Further Reading -- Chapter 8 Experiencing Cities --
8.1 Introduction -- 8.2 What is "Experience"? -- Social
difference and power -- 8.3 Social Space, City Space --
Gentrification -- Is the "ghetto" your home? --
Homelessness -- Youth geographies and consumption spaces -
- 8.4 Is there an Urban Identity? -- 8.5 Emotions and City
Life -- 8.6 Summary and Conclusions -- 8.7 Further Reading
-- Chapter 9 Molding and Marketing the Image of the City -
- 9.1 Introduction -- 9.2 Contemporary Perspectives on
Urban Entrepreneurialism -- 9.3 Who Markets Cities and to
Whom? Key Actors and Audiences -- 9.4 Making the Pitch:
The Strategies and Politics of Shaping Urban Identities
for the Market -- Imagineering the built environment as a
resource for production and consumption -- People as
resources for production and consumption -- Managing and
policing the Imagineered city -- The politics of
maintaining a city's image -- 9.5 Summary and Conclusions
-- 9.6 Further Reading -- Chapter 10 Nature and
Environment in the City -- 10.1 Introduction -- 10.2
Nature in the Modern Metropolis -- Urban metabolism --
Positive environmentalism -- Disease, life, and death in
the modern city -- 10.3 Regulating Nature and Environment
in the City
505 8 Regulating the boundaries between city and countryside --
Re-imagining nature in the entrepreneurial city -- 10.4
The Urban Sustainability Fix: Towards Low Carbon Cities --
10.5 Summary and Conclusion -- 10.6 Further Reading --
Chapter 11 Urban Arts and Visual Cultures -- 11.1
Introduction -- 11.2 Art, Aesthetics, and Urban Space --
11.3 Visuality -- 11.4 The Artistic Mode of Production --
11.5 Architecture, Verticality, and the Nation -- 11.6
Museums and Memorialization -- 11.7 Summary and
Conclusions -- 11.8 Further Reading -- Chapter 12
Alternative Urban Spaces and Politics -- 12.1 Introduction
-- 12.2 Beyond Mainstream Urban Development Politics --
12.3 The Right to the City and the New Urban Commons --
The right to the city -- The new urban commons -- 12.4 The
City, Citizenship, and Democracy -- 12.5 Environmental and
Social Justice in the City -- 12.6 Circuits of Value and
Alternative Urban Enterprises -- 12.7 Summary and
Conclusions -- 12.8 Further Reading -- Chapter 13 Urban
Crises -- 13.1 Introduction -- 13.2 Global Financial
Crisis and Austerity Urbanism -- 13.3 Shrinking Cities --
The effects of shrinkage on urban identity and memory --
13.4 National Political Unrest -- Bangkok, Thailand --
13.5 The Urban Carceral Society -- The carceral society
away from prison -- 13.6 Militarization of the City,
Urbanization of the Military -- 13.7 Summary and
Conclusions -- 13.8 Further Reading -- Chapter 14 Epilogue
: Critical Urban Geographies and Their Futures -- 14.1
Introduction -- 14.2 Ways Forward -- Exploring
interconnected urban worlds -- Looking for new and
existing alliances and social movements in the city --
Rescaling knowledge of the state and citizenship around
the city -- Revealing urban geographies of social
reproduction -- Planning for social and environmental
justice in the city -- 14.3 Final reflections and
Conclusions -- Glossary
505 8 References -- Index -- EULA
520 Urban Geography a comprehensive introduction to a variety
of issues relating to contemporary urban geography,
including patterns and processes of urbanization, urban
development, urban planning, and life experiences in
modern cities. Reveals both the diversity of ordinary
urban geographies and the networks, flows and relations
which increasingly connect cities and urban spaces at the
global scale Uses the city as a lens for proposing and
developing critical concepts which show how wider social
processes, relations, and power structures are changing
Considers the experiences, lives, practices, struggles,
and words of ordinary urban residents and marginalized
social groups rather than exclusively those of urban
elites Shows readers how to develop critical perspectives
on dominant neoliberal representations of the city and
explore the great diversity of urban worlds
588 Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other
sources
590 Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest
Ebook Central, 2020. Available via World Wide Web. Access
may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated
libraries
650 0 SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / Urban
655 4 Electronic books
700 1 McCann, Eugene
700 1 Thomas, Mary
776 08 |iPrint version:|aJonas, Andrew E. G.|tUrban Geography : A
Critical Introduction|dChicester : John Wiley & Sons,
Incorporated,c2015|z9781405189798
830 0 Critical Introductions to Geography Ser
856 40 |uhttps://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/sinciatw/
detail.action?docID=1895507|zClick to View