Description
The award-winning book on urban poverty--now thoroughly revised and updated
About the Author
William W. Goldsmith is Professor of City and Regional Planning and Director of the Program on International Studies in Planning at Cornell University. He has taught throughtout Latin America, and during the Clinton Administration he served on the EPA Clean Air Act Advisory Board.
Edward J. Blakely is Honorary Professor of Urban Policy at the U.S. Studies Centre at the University of Sydney. He ran for Mayor in Oakland in 1998, was Dean at University of Southern California and also at the Milano Graduate School, and most recently served as recovery czar for New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina.
Reviews
"When the authors concluded the first edition with an optimistic appraisal of policy options that could alleviate poverty and inequality, they could not have known that the nation was on the cusp of a political and economic transformation that would greatly exacerbate existing inequalities. Therefore, this second edition is all the more welcome." - Contemporary Sociology "[A] coherent account that draws on an extensive array of sources to describe the divisions that isolate poorer residents from the majority of the population...After a thoughtful overview, they amass their evidence to shed light on 'separate assets' (income distribution, and differences by race and gender), 'separate opportunities' (participation in the labour market, international comparisons) and 'separate places' (the changing social and economic contours of city regions). For many readers...the chapter on the changing shape of the American metropolis will be of most interest... [A] generally incisive and well-argued book." -Housing Studies
Book Information
ISBN 9781439902929
Author William Goldsmith
Format Paperback
Page Count 268
Imprint Temple University Press,U.S.
Publisher Temple University Press,U.S.
Dimensions(mm) 229mm * 152mm * 18mm