000 | 01758nam a2200181Ia 4500 | ||
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020 | _a0631212906 | ||
082 |
_a307.76 _bMAR |
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100 | _aMarcuse Peter Ed. | ||
245 | _aGlobalizing cities : a new spatial order? | ||
260 |
_aMalden,Victoria etc _bBlackwell Publishing _c2005 |
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300 | _axviii,318p. | ||
500 | _aCONTENTS List of Figures vii List of Maps viii List of Tables x List of Contributors xii Series Editors' Preface xv Preface xvii 1 Introduction 1 Peter Marcuse and Ronald van Kempen 2 The Unavoidable Continuities of the City 22 Robert A. Beauregard and Anne Haila 3 From the Metropolis to Globalization: The Dialectics of Race and Urban Form 37 William W. Goldsmith 4 From Colonial City to Globalizing City? The Far-from- complete Spatial Transformation of Calcutta 56 Sanjqy Chakravorty 5 Rio de Janeiro: Emerging Dualization in a Historically Unequal City 78 Luiz Cesar de Queiroz Ribeiro and Edward E. Telles 6 Singapore: the Changing Residential Landscape in a Winner City 95 Leo van Grunsven 7.Tokyo: Patterns of Familiarity and Partitions of Difference 127 Paul Wale? 8 Still a Global City: The Racial and Ethnic Segmentation of New York 158 John R. Logan 9 Brussels: Post-Fordist Polarization in a Fordist Spatial Canvas 186 Christian Kesteloot 10 The Imprint of the Post-Fordist Transition on Australian Cities 211 Blair Badcock 1 1The Globalization of Frankfurt am Main: Core, Periphery and Social Conflict 228 Roger Keil and Klaus Ronneberger 12 Conclusion: A Changed Spatial Order 249 Peter Marcuse and Ronald van Kempen List of References 276 Index 302 | ||
700 | _aKempen, Van Ed. | ||
890 | _aAustralia | ||
891 | _aMr. Howard Spodek | ||
891 | _aSchool of Architecture, CEPT Uni. | ||
999 |
_c12963 _d12963 |