The Social Production of Urban Space
340 pages, 6 x 9
Paperback
Release Date:01 Aug 1994
ISBN:9780292727724
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The Social Production of Urban Space

University of Texas Press

From reviews of the first edition:

"This is perhaps the best theoretically oriented book by a United States urban sociologist since the work of Firey, Hawley, and Sjoberg in the 1940s and 1950s.... Gottdiener is on the cutting edge of urban theoretical work today." —Joe R. Feagin, Contemporary Sociology

Since its first publication in 1985, The Social Production of Urban Space has become a landmark work in urban studies. In this second edition, M. Gottdiener assesses important new theoretical models of urban space—and their shortcomings—including the global perspective, the flexible accumulation school, postmodernism, the new international division of labor, and the "growth machine" perspective.

Going beyond the limitations of these and older theories, Gottdiener proposes a model of urban growth that accounts for the deconcentration away from the central city that began in the United States in the 1920s and continues today. Sociologists, political scientists, economists, geographers, and urban planners will find his interdisciplinary approach to urban science invaluable, as it is currently the most comprehensive treatment of European and American work in these related fields.

M. Gottdiener is a professor of sociology and urban studies at the University of California, Riverside, and author of several trend-setting works on urban development, including Urban Life in Transition and the textbook The New Urban Sociology (1994).
 
  • Preface to the Second Edition
  • Preface to the First Edition
  • 1. Introduction
  • 2. Urban Ecology, Economics, and Geography: Spatial Analysis in Transition
  • 3. Marxian Political Economy
  • 4. Floating Paradigms: The Debate on the Theory of Space
  • 5. Beyond Marxian Political Economy: The Trinity Formula and the Analysis of Space
  • 6. Structure and Agency in the Production of Space
  • 7. The Restructuring of Settlement Space
  • 8. Community, Liberation, and Everyday Life
  • References
  • Index
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