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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
25 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Amazing in its importance,
By Richard Layman (Washington, DC) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Urban Fortunes: The Political Economy of Place (Paperback)
I feel compelled to write a short review because of the two negative reviews accompanying this listing. This book is an extension of the arguments in "The City as a Growth Machine," the seminal sociology article from 1976, by Harvey Molotch. Molotch's basic argument is that previously, local government and community studies focused on intra-elite competition and the like. His major point was that regardless of differences of opinion within the local political power structure, all in fact were united behind a "growth agenda" directed to an intensification of land uses and an increase in rents (the economics term, in the sense of the rentier class). The book extends these arguments much further. For example, one of the points made is about the "use value" versus the "exchange value" of place. The latter is about making money off place, the former about the intrinsic value of home, etc. The other major point (also in the article) is the growth machine's "value-free development" ideology, that growth is always good, adds jobs, etc. This book is as important to urban studies as Jane Jacobs _Death and Life of Great American Cities_. Whereas Jacobs focuses on design, density, and mixed uses; Logan and Molotch focus on the sociology, politics, and economics of local government. In the argot of today, they focus on the "back story." Sections on the role of sports, gambling, etc., in the growth machine efforts are no less worthwhile. Any one who is active on local land use issues will find this book to be a revelation. My only significant "criticism" is that the book is 17 years old and could use an updating with additional citations, etc. In short, this is an essential book.
17 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Explaning the Deep Structure of Local Politics,
By "ahirsch22" (Sacramento, CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Urban Fortunes: The Political Economy of Place (Paperback)
If you've ever tried to understand seeming arbitrary political decisions about land use, or why some growth issues are never discussed, or why certain transportation projects are funded and others are not, this book provides an structure of understanding local and regional politics in America in the late 20th century, one you won't find in Planning School or if you are in transportation engineering. It also tells how globalized capitalism is driving local Logan and Molotch's thesis is to local politics what Darwin evolutuionary concepts are to natural botony and natural history. You will never watch local government the same This book is considered one of the most important books in sociology of the last 50 years, and won the American Sociology If you are a died in the wool Cato-Institute/ American Enterprise Institution/Chicago School liberatian /free market-solved everything person, you won't like it. But if you want to
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A brilliant new way to look at cities,
This review is from: Urban Fortunes: The Political Economy of Place, 20th Anniversary Edition, With a New Preface (Paperback)
Who rules cities? Logan and Molotch have a theory. This book lays it out, in fairly simple terms. It argues that landowners have a shared interest in "growth", i.e. increased property values (land's exchange-value), and are willing to do whatever it takes to get them, including taking over government. This puts them in conflict with residents who care about their neighborhoods (land's use-value) and don't want growth's unstoppable engine.It's a brilliant book, with insights on every page and some poignant stories as well. Logan and Molotch are sociologists, not writers, so the book drags at points, but it's well worth it for anyone who's interested in the subject. My major critique is that it underplays the importance of planning and doesn't provide a good explanation for it, but that's a rather minor criticism, all things considered. Highly recommended.
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