The Economy of CitiesThe thesis of Jane Jacobsʹ The Economy of Cities remains remarkably fresh and provocative three decades later. Cities, she asserts, are not the result of processes most scientists and economists have assumed they were: Cities do not develop because a pre-existing rural economic base develops and eventually becomes strong enough to support an essentially parasitic urban growth. Instead, Jacobs argues, cities are the prerequisite for any kind of rural economy. Where there are no cities, there are no sustainable rural economies, and the rural economy depends on the city rather than the other way around. Jacobs defines "city" as a "settlement that consistently generates its economic growth from its own local economy"; population centers of any size that have never done this do not meet her definition of city. Likewise, Jacob defines "urban" as "pertaining only to cities ..."--Review from http://classes.seattleu.edu/multidisciplinary/urbanstudies/resource/reviews/economy.htm (Oct. 18, 2012). |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 28
Page 30
... explosion of city wealth , an explosion of new kinds of work , an explosion of new exports , and an explosion in the very size of the city . The work to be done and the population both increase 30 ] THE ECONOMY OF CITIES.
... explosion of city wealth , an explosion of new kinds of work , an explosion of new exports , and an explosion in the very size of the city . The work to be done and the population both increase 30 ] THE ECONOMY OF CITIES.
Page 145
Jane Jacobs. 5 Explosive City Growth This chapter concerns itself only incidentally with how cities generate new exports . We shall concentrate instead on what cities do with some of the imports they earn by ... Explosive City Growth.
Jane Jacobs. 5 Explosive City Growth This chapter concerns itself only incidentally with how cities generate new exports . We shall concentrate instead on what cities do with some of the imports they earn by ... Explosive City Growth.
Page 157
... explosive growth . Nobody knows when London had its first . It certainly had one in the thirteenth century ( among ... explosive growth . Paris , incidentally , was replacing its imports from Dinant at about the same time as Explosive ...
... explosive growth . Nobody knows when London had its first . It certainly had one in the thirteenth century ( among ... explosive growth . Paris , incidentally , was replacing its imports from Dinant at about the same time as Explosive ...
Contents
Cities FirstRural Development Later | 3 |
How New Work Begins | 49 |
The Valuable Inefficiencies and Impracticalities of Cities | 85 |
Copyright | |
7 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
activities Adam Smith added agriculture already American Angeles animals automobile barter become exporters began bicycles Birmingham Boston bought branch plants brassiere breakaways build capital Çatal Hüyük centers century city economies city growth city's exports cloth company towns course craft craftsmen customers depot Detroit developing economies development rate divisions of labor econ economic development efficient embryonic city enterprises episode of import equipment existing expanding market export exporting organizations factory farming financing grain growing guilds happens Harappa hunting import replacing industry initial export kinds little cities logic London Los Angeles machines makers Manchester manufacturing mass-production medieval cities Mellaart ment merchants Mohenjo-daro multiplier effect nomic numbers Obsidian older plant pollution population ports rapidly reciprocating system replacing imports rural world seeds settlements shifted stagnation started sulfuric acid sumer suppliers supply things Thiokol tion Tokyo trade Urartu velopment villages wastes wild food workers York