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THE SOCIOLOGY OF URBAN COMMUNITIES
The Sociology of Urban Communities provides an authoritative collection of over 60 key articles by leading international contributors to urban sociology, together with an introductory article by the editor.
The coverage is comprehensive, ranging from work on the role of cities in the transition from feudalism to capitalism and the nineteenth century origins of urban sociology, through the classic writings associated with the Chicago School and the Marxist new urban sociology of the 1960s and 1970s. The collection is completed by sections which focus on the urban consequences of contemporary economic restructuring and work which reflects recent developments in the sociology of gender, space and postmodernism.
The coverage is comprehensive, ranging from work on the role of cities in the transition from feudalism to capitalism and the nineteenth century origins of urban sociology, through the classic writings associated with the Chicago School and the Marxist new urban sociology of the 1960s and 1970s. The collection is completed by sections which focus on the urban consequences of contemporary economic restructuring and work which reflects recent developments in the sociology of gender, space and postmodernism.
More Information
Contributors
Contents
More Information
The Sociology of Urban Communities provides an authoritative collection of over 60 key articles by leading international contributors to urban sociology, together with an introductory article by the editor.
The coverage is comprehensive, ranging from work on the role of cities in the transition from feudalism to capitalism and the nineteenth century origins of urban sociology, through the classic writings associated with the Chicago School and the Marxist new urban sociology of the 1960s and 1970s. The collection is completed by sections which focus on the urban consequences of contemporary economic restructuring and work which reflects recent developments in the sociology of gender, space and postmodernism.
The coverage is comprehensive, ranging from work on the role of cities in the transition from feudalism to capitalism and the nineteenth century origins of urban sociology, through the classic writings associated with the Chicago School and the Marxist new urban sociology of the 1960s and 1970s. The collection is completed by sections which focus on the urban consequences of contemporary economic restructuring and work which reflects recent developments in the sociology of gender, space and postmodernism.
Contributors
Contributors include: A. Amin, E.W. Burgess, M. Castells, M. Gottdiener, D. Harvey, H. Molotch, R.E. Pahl, C.G. Pickvance, S. Sassen, A. Sayer
Contents
Contents: Introduction Volume I: Part I: Cities and the Growth of Capitalism Part II: The Chicago School and its Legacy I: Urban Culture and Community Part III: The Chicago School and its Legacy II: The City as an Ecological System Name Index • Volume II: Acknowledgements Part I: The New Urban Sociology: Weberian and Marxist Formulations Part II: The New Urban Sociology: Surveys and Critiques Part III: Economic Restructuring and Urban Change I: New Regimes of Accumulation and Changing Localities Name Index • Volume III: Acknowledgements Part I: Economic Restructuring and Urban Change II: The Local State and the Politics of Growth Part II: Economic Restructuring and Urban Change III: Social Divisions and Survival Strategies Part III: New Theoretical Perspectives: Space, Culture, Gender and Post-moderism Index