City Bound: How States Stifle Urban Innovation

City Bound: How States Stifle Urban Innovation

City Bound: How States Stifle Urban Innovation

City Bound: How States Stifle Urban Innovation

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Overview

Many major American cities are defying the conventional wisdom that suburbs are the communities of the future. But as these urban centers prosper, they increasingly confront significant constraints. In City Bound, Gerald E. Frug and David J. Barron address these limits in a new way.

Based on a study of the differing legal structures of Boston, New York, Atlanta, Chicago, Denver, San Francisco, and Seattle, City Bound explores how state law determines what cities can and cannot do to raise revenue, control land use, and improve city schools. Frug and Barron show that state law can make it much easier for cities to pursue a global-city or a tourist-city agenda than to respond to the needs of middle-class residents or to pursue regional alliances. But they also explain that state law is often so outdated, and so rooted in an unjustified distrust of local decision making, that the legal process makes it hard for successful cities to develop and implement any coherent vision of their future. Their book calls not for local autonomy but for a new structure of state-local relations that would enable cities to take the lead in charting the future course of urban development. It should be of interest to everyone who cares about the future of American cities, whether political scientists, planners, architects, lawyers, or simply citizens.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780801458224
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: 03/15/2011
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 280
File size: 505 KB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Gerald E. Frug is Louis D. Brandeis Professor of Law at Harvard Law School. He is the author of City Making: Building Communities without Building Walls. David J. Barron is Professor of Law at Harvard Law School. He is the coauthor (with Gerald E. Frug) of Dispelling the Myth of Home Rule: Local Power in Greater Boston and coeditor (with Gerald E. Frug and Richard Ford) of Local Government Law, 4th edition.

Table of Contents

Preface
AcknowledgmentsPart I: CITY STRUCTURES
1. City Structures and Urban Theory
2. City Structures and Local AutonomyPart II: SEVEN CITIES
3. Home Rule
4. Revenue and Expenditures
5. Land Use and Development
6. EducationPart III: CITY FUTURES
7. The Global City
8. The Tourist City
9. The Middle Class City
10. The Regional CityConclusion
Notes
About the Authors
Index

What People are Saying About This

Bruce Katz

Gerald E. Frug and David J. Barron have produced a masterful assessment of the limitations of big city and metropolitan powers at the very moment when these places drive national prosperity and are our best vehicles for social and climate solutions. There is much at stake here. Remaking local governance is now a critical element of an agenda for national renewal.

Todd Swanstrom

City Bound is the most comprehensive analysis of the legal powers of an American city that I have ever seen. The scholarship is impeccable. Gerald E. Frug and David J. Barron stress that institutions do not just reflect interests; they shape interests and bias the policy agenda.

Myron Orfield

City Bound is a creative, principled, and compassionate approach to the tragedy of powerless cities and polarized regions.

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