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The Divided City

Poverty and Prosperity in Urban America

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Who really benefits from urban revival? Cities, from trendy coastal areas to the nation's heartland, are seeing levels of growth beyond the wildest visions of only a few decades ago. But vast areas in the same cities house thousands of people living in poverty who see little or no new hope or opportunity. Even as cities revive, they are becoming more unequal and more segregated. What does this mean for these cities—and the people who live in them?

In The Divided City, urban practitioner and scholar Alan Mallach shows us what has happened over the past 15 to 20 years in industrial cities like Pittsburgh, Detroit, Cleveland, and Baltimore, as they have undergone unprecedented, unexpected revival. He draws from his decades of experience working in America's cities, and pulls in insightful research and data, to spotlight these changes while placing them in their larger economic, social, and political context. Mallach explores the pervasive significance of race in American cities and looks closely at the successes and failures of city governments, nonprofit entities, and citizens as they have tried to address the challenges of change.

The Divided City offers strategies to foster greater equality and opportunity. Mallach makes a compelling case that these strategies must be local in addition to being concrete and focusing on people's needs—education, jobs, housing and quality of life. Change, he argues, will come city by city, not through national plans or utopian schemes.

This is the first book to provide a comprehensive, grounded picture of the transformation of America's older industrial cities. It is neither a dystopian narrative nor a one-sided "the cities are back" story, but a balanced picture rooted in the nitty-gritty reality of these cities. The Divided City is imperative for anyone who cares about cities and who wants to understand how to make today's urban revival work for everyone.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 2, 2018
      Mallach (Bringing Buildings Back) digs into the dark side of America’s urban revival in this uneven analysis of the forces reshaping “legacy” cities—the Clevelands, Milwaukees, and Buffalos of the heartland, formerly industrial cities hollowed out by suburbanization and white flight in the 1960s and ’70s—rather than the major coastal cities that have received the most attention from others investigating urban renewal. Mallach describes how gentrifying areas of legacy cities have attracted an influx of college graduates with the skills to thrive in the postindustrial knowledge economy, who draw trendy coffee shops and revamp neighborhoods around anchor institutions such as universities. At the same time, he argues, middle-class and poor neighborhoods in the same cities are sliding downhill, buffeted by the subprime mortgage crisis of the 2000s, structural economic changes, and the legacies of racial segregation. For every gentrifying neighborhood like Baltimore’s Fell’s Point or St. Louis’s Washington Avenue, Mallach writes, many more are falling into a cycle of physical deterioration, out-migration, and abandonment. Mallach points to localized infrastructure spending, job creation, and education as possible solutions to this urban crisis. While the book’s subject matter is timely, it relies heavily on synthesizing other authors’ arguments, resulting in an unfocused and somewhat derivative analysis of the issues confronting cities.

    • Booklist

      May 15, 2018
      For all of the talk of recent urban revival, only a tiny proportion of revived neighborhoods have seen the benefits, while the vast majority have continued to experience a precipitous decline. This startling observation drives Mallach's deeply researched survey of the dual processes of revival and decline in American cities large and small. Drawing from historical, sociological, and economic research, Mallach explains how deindustrialization, demographic change, and craft-beer-sipping millennials have transformed the urban environment. He surveys the mixed record of efforts to spark revival, from community development corporations in Newark to urban greening in Detroit, and draws on his own professional experiences as a city planner in Trenton, New Jersey. The breadth of information almost overwhelms the big idea, but certain chapters, particularly one on gentrification, captivate. Ultimately, Mallach writes, the middle is disappearing in cities, a profound shift apparent in American society broadly. In light of such a starkly diagnosed problem, the author's modest policy recommendations confound. But for readers looking for an introduction to important issues facing cities today, this book will serve admirably.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2018, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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