The Political Economy of Interorganizational Relations in the Central Cities: CETA and Economic Development |
Contents
Problems in Interorganizational | 21 |
Summary and Conclusions | 40 |
Corporations and Central City Economies | 63 |
Copyright | |
12 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
55 central cities additive model Benson central city governments CETA and economic CETA prime sponsors comparative urban research corporate business cities corporate business community corporate business interests corporate business power corporate business presence corporate headquarters distress and minority economic development organizations economic development programs economic distress employment and training Factor factor analysis federal formation of independent Friedland 1983 growth and political independent PIC's independent Private Industry interaction effects Interaction Model interest groups interorganizational relations JTPA ment metropolitan hierarchy minority and poor nodal centers organizational sociology percent PIC's and quasi-public political integration policy poor population pressures Poverty Private Industry Councils private sector placement producer service PSIP public policy quasi-public coordination regression relationship secondary labor markets service growth service levels shown in Table sociology of interorganizational strong corporate business structurally unemployed theoretical Title IIB Title VII programs urban political economy variables War on Poverty weak corporate business