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Must the strip mall and the eight-lane highway define 21st century American life? That is a central question posed by critics of suburban and exurban living in America. Yet despite the ubiquity of the critique, it never sticks - Americans by the scores of millions have willingly moved into
sprawling developments over the past few decades. Americans find many of the more substantial criticisms of sprawl easy to ignore because they often come across as snobbish in tone. Yet as Thad Williamson explains, sprawl does create real, measurable social problems. Williamson's work is unique in
two important ways. First, while he highlights the deleterious effects of sprawl on civic life in America, he is also evenhanded. He does not dismiss the pastoral, homeowning ideal that is at the root of sprawl, and is sympathetic to the vast numbers of Americans who very clearly prefer it.
Secondly, his critique is neither aesthetic nor moralistic in tone, but based on social science. Utilizing a landmark 30,000-person survey, he shows that sprawl fosters civic disengagement, diminishes social trust, accentuates inequality, and negatively impacts the environment. Sprawl, Justice, and
Citizenship will not only be the most comprehensive work in print on the subject, it will be the first to offer a empirically rigorous critique of the most popular form of living in America today.
1. Introduction: Sprawl as a Moral Issue
Notes for Chapter One
2. Defining, Explaining, and Measuring Sprawl
Notes for Chapter Two
3. Counting Costs and Benefits: Is Sprawl Efficient?
Notes for Chapter Three
4. Do People Like Sprawl (And So What If They Do?)
Notes for Chapter Four
5. Is Sprawl Fair? Liberal Egalitarianism and Sprawl
Notes for Chapter Five
6. Liberal Egalitarianism in a Cul-de-Sac? Sprawl, Liberal Virtue, and Social Solidarity
Notes for Chapter Six
7. Sprawl, Civic Virtue, and the Political Economy of Citizenship
Notes for Chapter Seven
8. You Can't March on a Strip Mall: Sprawl and Civic Disengagement
Notes for Chapter Eight
9. Sprawl, the Environment, and Climate Change
Notes for Chapter Nine
10. Reforming Sprawl, and Beyond
Appendices
Bibliography
Index
Thad Williamson is Assistant Professor of Leadership Studies and Political Science at the University of Richmond. He is co-winner of the American Political Science Association's Harold Lasswell Award for best dissertation in public policy in 2004, and lead co-author of Making a Place for
Community.
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Caractéristiques
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- ISBN9780195369434
- Code produit626533
- ÉditeurOXFORD UNIV. PRESS
- Date de publication1 mai 2010
- FormatPapier