Custodians of Place: Governing the Growth and Development of Cities

Custodians of Place: Governing the Growth and Development of Cities

by Paul G. Lewis, Max Neiman
ISBN-10:
1589012569
ISBN-13:
9781589012561
Pub. Date:
03/13/2009
Publisher:
Georgetown University Press
ISBN-10:
1589012569
ISBN-13:
9781589012561
Pub. Date:
03/13/2009
Publisher:
Georgetown University Press
Custodians of Place: Governing the Growth and Development of Cities

Custodians of Place: Governing the Growth and Development of Cities

by Paul G. Lewis, Max Neiman
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Overview

Based on a survey of hundreds of officials from California cities of different sizes and socioeconomic characteristics, Custodians of Place provides a new theoretical framework that accounts for how different types of cities arrive at decisions about residential growth and economic development.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781589012561
Publisher: Georgetown University Press
Publication date: 03/13/2009
Series: American Governance and Public Policy series
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 272
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.80(h) x 0.90(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Paul G. Lewis is assistant professor of political science at Arizona State University. His previous book, Shaping Suburbia: How Political Institutions Organize Urban Development, was named an Outstanding Academic Book by Choice.

Max Neiman is a senior resident scholar at the Institute of Government Studies, University of California, Berkeley.

Table of Contents

Preface

1. Introduction: Contingent Trusteeship and the Local Governance of Growth

2. The Context for Local Choices: Growth Pressures, Fiscal Incentives, and the California Setting

3. What Type of City to Be? Evaluating Different Kinds of Growth

4. The Vision Thing: Pursuing a Future Ideal

5. Firm Ground: Competing for Businesses and Jobs

6. Hustle or Balancing Act? Regulating Residential Growth

7. Custodians of Place: Systemic Representation in Local Governance

Appendix A: The Consistency of "Visions" with Other Officials' Views: Comparing Responses across Surveys

Appendix B: Detailed Results of Multivariate Analyses

Notes

Bibliography

Index

What People are Saying About This

Edward G. Goetz

Lewis and Neiman move our understanding of local development policy forward by positing a more complex model of local policymaking that goes beyond the constraining effects of local economic imperatives. Not only do politics 'count' in local development, but Lewis and Neiman provide a compelling framework for understanding how.

Richard C. Feiock

Custodians of Place lays out an innovative framework for understanding city land use and development decisions.

Elisabeth Gerber

A careful, thoughtful, balanced, timely, well-written analysis of growth politics and policy in California cities. The results provide readers with a rich and nuanced portrait of the development policies pursued by various types of cities.

Victoria Basolo

Lewis and Neiman's conceptualization of urban development politics reaches a higher level of abstraction than previous work. The authors do not throw away existing theory, but instead offer the more generalized concept of 'contingent trusteeship' thus allowing for the shading and hues of local governance to be recognized and examined. This book is a valuable read and an important resource for students of urban politics and planning.

From the Publisher

"A careful, thoughtful, balanced, timely, well-written analysis of growth politics and policy in California cities. The results provide readers with a rich and nuanced portrait of the development policies pursued by various types of cities."—Elisabeth Gerber, University of Michigan

"Custodians of Place lays out an innovative framework for understanding city land use and development decisions."—Richard C. Feiock, Augustus B. Turnbull Professor of Public Administration, Askew School of Public Administration and Policy, Florida State University

"This is an important book. . . . Lewis and Neiman draw upon but move beyond existing theories of urban policymaking, leadership, and representation . . . and make a major contribution to the field of urban politics and to our understanding of the way urban government works."—Harold L. Wolman, director, George Washington Institute of Public Policy

"Analytically crisp and well researched, Custodians of Place is a major contribution to the literature on urban development policy. The authors convincingly show how the future (vision) and the past (community history) shape how city officials make all-important land use and development decisions. This is must reading both for urban scholars and practitioners."—Steven Erie, University of California, San Diego

"Lewis and Neiman's conceptualization of urban development politics reaches a higher level of abstraction than previous work. The authors do not throw away existing theory, but instead offer the more generalized concept of 'contingent trusteeship' thus allowing for the shading and hues of local governance to be recognized and examined. This book is a valuable read and an important resource for students of urban politics and planning. "—Victoria Basolo, University of California, Irvine and editor, Journal of Urban Affairs

"Lewis and Neiman move our understanding of local development policy forward by positing a more complex model of local policymaking that goes beyond the constraining effects of local economic imperatives. Not only do politics 'count' in local development, but Lewis and Neiman provide a compelling framework for understanding how. "—Edward G. Goetz, director, Urban and Regional Planning Program, Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs, University of Minnesota

Harold L. Wolman

This is an important book. . . . Lewis and Neiman draw upon but move beyond existing theories of urban policymaking, leadership, and representation . . . and make a major contribution to the field of urban politics and to our understanding of the way urban government works.

Steven Erie

Analytically crisp and well researched, Custodians of Place is a major contribution to the literature on urban development policy. The authors convincingly show how the future (vision) and the past (community history) shape how city officials make all-important land use and development decisions. This is must reading both for urban scholars and practitioners.

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