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Author Williamson, Thad.

Title Sprawl, justice, and citizenship : the civic costs of the American way of life / Thad Williamson.

Imprint New York : Oxford University Press, 2011.

Copies

Location Call No. OPAC Message Status
 Axe 3rd Floor Stacks  307.76 W676s 2011    ---  Available
Description x, 404 p. ; 23 cm.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents Introduction : sprawl as a moral issue -- Defining, explaining, and measuring sprawl -- Counting costs and benefits : is sprawl efficient? -- Do people like sprawl (and so what if they do?) -- Is sprawl fair? Liberal egalitarianism and sprawl -- Liberal egalitarianism in a cul-de-sac? Sprawl, liberal virtue, and social solidarity -- Sprawl, civic virtue, and the political economy of citizenship -- You can't march on a strip mall : sprawl and civic disengagement -- Sprawl, the environment, and climate change -- Reforming sprawl, and beyond.
Summary "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, 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."--pub. desc.
Subject Cities and towns -- United States -- Growth.
Social justice -- United States.
ISBN 9780199897575 (paperback)
0199897573 (paperback)

 
    
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