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New York Professor Jill S. Gross (Hunter College, CUNY)

New York By Professor Jill S. Gross (Hunter College, CUNY)

New York by Professor Jill S. Gross (Hunter College, CUNY)


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Summary

A comprehensive analysis of the political, economic and social dynamics that have made New York a megacity today.

New York Summary

New York by Professor Jill S. Gross (Hunter College, CUNY)

New York became the world's first megacity in the 1930s. Since then it has remained the largest city in North America but, globally, it has been surpassed in size by the younger cities of Asia. Nevetheless its metropolitan area is home to 20 million people and it continues to be America's premier city.

Jill Gross and Hank Savitch examine the New York metropolis through the lens of a series of twenty-first century pressures related to demography, economic growth, urban development, governance, immigration, leadership and globalization. How New York's institutions and policies have either risen to meet these challenges, stagnated in the face of them, or simply failed to resolve them is the focus of the book. In particular, the authors examine the muncipality of New York City, as the heart of the megacity, and how it navigates the increasingly complex battles with higher levels of government over rights to the city and resource needs.

The book examines the shifting tides of corporate centred development, particularly the vibrant financial sector, and how it has leveraged its powerful geopolitical position in the global economy to continue to grow. The question of governance is explored along with the growing reliance on public-private partnerships to manage megacity problems. Mayoral control and leadership is shown to have been fundamental to meeting the needs of the residential population - issues such as crime, schools and housing - along with the demands of business. With over 3 million immigrants, New York is the most diverse city in North America, but it is also among the most segregated and the authors investigate the positive and negative outcomes that such diversity brings.

As a comprehensive analysis of the political, economic and social dynamics that have made New York a megacity today, the book will be of interest to a broad readership in political science, public administration, public policy, sociology, geography, political economy, urban planning and regional studies.

New York Reviews

This book breaks important new ground, especially in its portrayal and analysis of the governance and integration of New York's many contemporary and often paradoxical urban faces. Moreover, as a case study of the world's quintessential global city, it serves to illuminate the forces of globalization imprinted on the urban milieu. For those interested in the political economy of a megacity in the twenty-first century, this book is an essential read.

-- Herman Boschken, San Jose State University

A valuable contribution to scholarship on the New York city region, its recent challenges and tensions, including Covid and Super Storm Sandy.

-- Bruce Berg, Fordham University

This fresh, wide-ranging and insightful take on the New York megalopolis spans from historical origins to current challenges. It focuses not only on the inevitability of urban crises, but the many ways and whys the region has shown resilience, sometimes from leadership but mostly from the component parts. As these renowned urbanists say, 'disaster is the mother of adaptation'.

-- John Mollenkopf, City University of New York

About Professor Jill S. Gross (Hunter College, CUNY)

Jill S. Gross is a Professor of Urban Policy and Planning at Hunter College of the City University of New York, and Director of the graduate program in Urban Policy and Leadership. She has served as President of the Urban and Local Politics Section of the American Political Science Association and Chair of the Urban Affairs Association. She conducted research on the urban governance of migration as a European Union Fulbright Schuman Scholar. She is currently on the editorial boards of Journal Of Race, Ethnicity & The City and Urban Affairs Review. Her most recent works are Hyperlocal Place Governance in a Fragmented World (2022) and Constructing Metropolitan Space (coeditor) (2019).

Hank V. Savitch is Emeritus Brown & Williamson Distinguished Professor of Urban & Public Affairs, University of Louisville. He currently teaches at Florida Atlanta University's Department of Urban and Regional Planning and is a Fellow at its Center for Urban and Environmental Solutions (CUES). He has been co-editor of the Journal of Urban Affairs and President of the Urban Politics Section of the American Political Science Association. He has published 13 books and more than 100 articles on various aspects of urban development and public policy. His co-authored book, Cities in the International Marketplace (2004) won the APSA award for best book in urban studies.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction: New York as a megacity

2. Crises, breakdowns and New York's endurance

3. Building a global megacity: corporate-centered urban development and leaderships

4. Expanded governance in the megacity

5. Neighborhoods, diversification and gentrification in the megacity

6. Globalization in the megacity

7. Conclusions

Additional information

NGR9781788212045
9781788212045
1788212045
New York by Professor Jill S. Gross (Hunter College, CUNY)
New
Paperback
Agenda Publishing
2023-03-23
208
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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Customer Reviews - New York