Selling Cities

Selling Cities
Author: David P. Varady
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Total Pages: 390
Release: 1995-08-10
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1438422776

Selling Cities takes the optimistic position that cities can be revitalized by attracting and retaining the middle class. The authors, experienced policymakers as well as academics, review previous work on city revitalization; report original research on homebuyers in the Cincinnati and Wilmington, Delaware metropolitan areas; and present case studies of middle-income schooling and housing policies in these and other metropolitan areas around the U.S. and Canada. Selling Cities spans several disciplines--economics, sociology, demography, law, and planning--and is one of the first books to examine both housing and schooling programs. It includes numerous recommendations for city revitalization; an analysis of middle-income housing programs such as tax abatements and below-market-rate mortgages; analyses of metropolitan school desegregation in the Wilmington area and magnet schools in Cincinnati; and proposals of policies to enhance cities' attraction and retention of the middle class.

Selling Places

Selling Places
Author: Stephen Ward
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 292
Release: 2005-10-09
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 1135818940

Selling Places explores the fascinating development of the place marketing and promotion over the last 150 years, drawing on examples from Northern America, Britain and continental Europe. The processes involved and the promotional imagery employed are meticulously presented and richly illustrated.

Selling the City

Selling the City
Author: Lee M. A. Simpson
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Total Pages: 244
Release: 2004
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780804748759

Between 1880 and 1940, California cities were in the vanguard in creating comprehensive city plans and zoning ordinances that came to characterize modern American city growth. This book reveals the means by which property-owning middle-class women achieved entry into the male-dominated sphere of urban planning. It suggests that women in California were not excluded from public life. Instead, they embraced the middle-class ideology of propertied self-interest and participated to the fullest extent possible in the urban struggle for regional dominance that shaped this period of western history. Likewise, as urban historians have presented this story as essentially male, this work suggests that although California's urban elite often maintained a division of labor along traditional gender lines, they clearly worked in a cross-gender alliance to shape a regional identity based on a commitment to urban growth.

Market Center Shifts

Market Center Shifts
Author: United States. Industry and Trade Administration
Publisher:
Total Pages: 44
Release: 1978
Genre: Government publications
ISBN: