Handbook of Housing and Built Environment in the United States. Elizabeth Huttman and Willem van Vliet, editors, andGovernment and Housing: Developments in Seven Countries. Willem van Vliet and Jan van Weesep, editors, andAffordable Housing and the Homeless. Jurgen Friedrichs, editor,Squatter Citizen: Life in the Urban Third World. Jorge E. Hardoy and David Satterthwaite;People, Power and Place: Perspectives on Anglo-American Politics. Keith Hoggart;Urban Housing Segregation of Minorities in Western Europe and the United States. Elizabeth Huttman, editor, Juliet Saltman and Wim Blauw, co-editors

1992 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 291-301
Author(s):  
David M. Smith ◽  
Donald Lyons ◽  
John S. Adams
Social Forces ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 70 (4) ◽  
pp. 1165
Author(s):  
Daniel J. Monti ◽  
Elizabeth Huttman ◽  
Juliet Saltman ◽  
Wim Blauw

1992 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 359
Author(s):  
Harvey Marshall ◽  
Elizabeth Huttman ◽  
Wim Blauw ◽  
Juliet Saltman

Author(s):  
Norman Fainstein ◽  
Susan S. Fainstein

This article outlines the theoretical approaches to analyzing urban redevelopment in the United States and Western Europe. It examines the policies that have been adopted in more than sixty years of public intervention within the already built environment and evaluates the role played by different social interests in affecting this intervention. The article suggests that programs for urban redevelopment rest within a field of forces which connects local conditions with global transformations, and considers the issue of slum clearance.


Author(s):  
Hans Joas ◽  
Wolfgang Knöbl

This chapter explores the connections between war and modernity as well as developments in Anglo-American historical sociology and its emphasis on war. Within American sociology, the turn to “war” was directly connected with the debate on modernization theory. This paradigm had not only forecast that the “underdeveloped countries” would come to resemble the United States and Western Europe both structurally and culturally: that they would become Westernized. Outside of Britain and the United States, historical sociology never managed to play much of a role. As far as Germany and France (as well as other European countries) are concerned, sociologists there either never really took a historical approach (Germany) or adopted a historical perspective molded by the dominant figure of Michel Foucault. This was evident in the debate on the “democratic peace” that took off in the 1980s and early 1990s, a debate of great relevance to social theory.


1991 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 213-217
Author(s):  
Mir Annice Mahmood

Foreign aid has been the subject of much examination and research ever since it entered the economic armamentarium approximately 45 years ago. This was the time when the Second World War had successfully ended for the Allies in the defeat of Germany and Japan. However, a new enemy, the Soviet Union, had materialized at the end of the conflict. To counter the threat from the East, the United States undertook the implementation of the Marshal Plan, which was extremely successful in rebuilding and revitalizing a shattered Western Europe. Aid had made its impact. The book under review is by three well-known economists and is the outcome of a study sponsored by the Department of State and the United States Agency for International Development. The major objective of this study was to evaluate the impact of assistance, i.e., aid, on economic development. This evaluation however, was to be based on the existing literature on the subject. The book has five major parts: Part One deals with development thought and development assistance; Part Two looks at the relationship between donors and recipients; Part Three evaluates the use of aid by sector; Part Four presents country case-studies; and Part Five synthesizes the lessons from development assistance. Part One of the book is very informative in that it summarises very concisely the theoretical underpinnings of the aid process. In the beginning, aid was thought to be the answer to underdevelopment which could be achieved by a transfer of capital from the rich to the poor. This approach, however, did not succeed as it was simplistic. Capital transfers were not sufficient in themselves to bring about development, as research in this area came to reveal. The development process is a complicated one, with inputs from all sectors of the economy. Thus, it came to be recognized that factors such as low literacy rates, poor health facilities, and lack of social infrastructure are also responsible for economic backwardness. Part One of the book, therefore, sums up appropriately the various trends in development thought. This is important because the book deals primarily with the issue of the effectiveness of aid as a catalyst to further economic development.


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