Balancing Nature and Commerce in Gateway Communities

Balancing Nature and Commerce in Gateway Communities
Author: Jim Howe
Publisher: Island Press
Total Pages: 176
Release: 2012-06-22
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 1597268380

Increasing numbers of Americans are fleeing cities and suburbs for the small towns and open spaces that surround national and state parks, wildlife refuges, historic sites, and other public lands. With their scenic beauty and high quality of life, these "gateway communities" have become a magnet for those looking to escape the congestion and fast tempo of contemporary American society. Yet without savvy planning, gateway communities could easily meet the same fate as the suburban communities that were the promised land of an earlier generation. This volume can help prevent that from happening. The authors offer practical and proven lessons on how residents of gateway communities can protect their community's identity while stimulating a healthy economy and safeguarding nearby natural and historic resources. They describe economic development strategies, land-use planning processes, and conservation tools that communities from all over the country have found effective. Each strategy or process is explained with specific examples, and numerous profiles and case studies clearly demonstrate how different communities have coped with the challenges of growth and development. Among the cities profiled are Boulder, Colorado; Townsend and Pittman Center Tennessee; Gettysburg, Pennsylvania; Tyrrell County, North Carolina; Jackson Hole, Wyoming; Sanibel Island, Florida; Calvert County, Maryland; Tuscon, Arizona; and Mount Desert Island, Maine. Balancing Nature and Commerce in Gateway Communities provides important lessons in how to preserve the character and integrity of communities and landscapes without sacrificing local economic well-being. It is an important resource for planners, developers, local officials, and concerned citizens working to retain the high quality of life and natural beauty of these cities and towns.

Communities of Commerce

Communities of Commerce
Author: Stacey E. Bressler
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Companies
Total Pages: 344
Release: 2000
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN:

Annotation.

Online Communities

Online Communities
Author: Chris Werry
Publisher: Prentice Hall
Total Pages: 456
Release: 2001
Genre: Computers
ISBN:

Comprises a variety of viewpoints regarding e-commerce, higher education through distance learning, democratization of universities, development of the Internet into a free universal encyclopaedia, community organization, etc.

Commerce, Culture, and Community in a Red Sea Port in the Thirteenth Century

Commerce, Culture, and Community in a Red Sea Port in the Thirteenth Century
Author: Li Guo
Publisher: BRILL
Total Pages: 360
Release: 2004-01-01
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9004137475

This is a study and edition of the Arabic documents uncovered in Quseir, Upper Egypt. These documents shed light on the Red Sea and Indian Ocean trade in the thirteenth century. They also reveal aspects of the everyday life, popular culture, and linguistic features of the communities involved.

Balancing Nature and Commerce in Gateway Communities

Balancing Nature and Commerce in Gateway Communities
Author: Jim Howe
Publisher: Shearwater Books
Total Pages: 184
Release: 1997-06
Genre: Architecture
ISBN:

Balancing Nature and Commerce in Gateway Communities provides lessons in how to preserve the character and integrity of communities and landscapes without sacrificing local economic well-being. The authors describe economic development strategies, land-use planning processes, and conservation tools that communities from all over the country have found effective.

Community and Commerce in Late Medieval Japan

Community and Commerce in Late Medieval Japan
Author: Hitomi Tonomura
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Total Pages: 312
Release: 1992-01-01
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0804766142

Late medieval Japan witnessed a growth in the power of the commoner, as seen in the spread of corporate villages (so) marked by collective ownership and administration and other self-governing features. This study of a community of so villages in central Japan from the fourteenth through the seventeenth centuries reconstructs the life of these villages by analyzing the rich and abundant communal records largely written by the villagers themselves and carefully preserved in the local shrine. The author show how these villagers founded and operated a shrine-centered organization that brought coherence, order, and prestige to the community at the same time it formalized the differences among the residents along gender and class lines. The Tokuchin-ho so was a governmental, social, and religious institution that facilitated the movement toward localism, but, the author argues, its growing collective power and organization also benefited its local proprietor, the great monastic complex of Enryakuji. Political and economic resources flowed vertically between the client-village and the patron-proprietor as they collaborated to secure internal peace and wide-reaching commercial interests. The book traces the transformation of the so as late medieval decentralization gave way to politically unified early modern society, with its enforced transfer of merchants from villages to towns, confiscation of shrine land, and the relinquishment of the so's political authority. Despite these efforts, as a powerful organization experienced in promoting communal order, the so was able to maintain its medieval legacy of self-determination, substantially preempting bureaucratic intervention in local governance. The local records allow the author to study the so from the villagers' perspective, and she presents new information on the position of women in rural communities, the local mode of economic surplus accumulation, the detailed social and economic functions of a shrine, and the reaction to nationwide cadastral surveys. The book is illustrated with 21 halftones.

Commerce and Culture

Commerce and Culture
Author: Christine Leigh Heyrman
Publisher: W W Norton & Company Incorporated
Total Pages: 431
Release: 1984
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780393955187

Examines the history of the maritime communities of Gloucester and Marblehead and notes the paradoxical retention of their conservative lifestyle in the face of economic prosperity.