Urban Problems and Community DevelopmentIn recent years, concerned governments, businesses, and civic groups have launched ambitious programs of community development designed to halt, and even reverse, decades of urban decline. But while massive amounts of effort and money are being dedicated to improving the inner-cities, two important questions have gone unanswered: Can community development actually help solve long-standing urban problems? And, based on social science analyses, what kinds of initiatives can make a difference? This book surveys what we currently know and what we need to know about community development's past, current, and potential contributions. The authors--economists, sociologists, political scientists, and a historian--define community development broadly to include all capacity building (including social, intellectual, physical, financial, and political assets) aimed at improving the quality of life in low- to moderate-income neighborhoods. The book addresses the history of urban development strategies, the politics of resource allocation, business and workforce development, housing, community development corporations, informal social organizations, schooling, and public security. |
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No one argues that community development can effectively counteract the business cycle or fend off major transformations in the macroeconomy . Neither can it compete with income - transfer programs as short - run responses to poverty .
responses to poverty . Community development can , however , help prevent neighborhood deterioration in ordinary times . It can blunt the extent to which economic turbulence produces social disorder . Community development can make low- ...
In Poverty and Place Paul Jargowsky demonstrates that conditions in the metropolitan economy are strong correlates of neighborhood income and poverty levels in the inner city . Indeed , from 1970 to 1990 Cleveland , Detroit , St. Louis ...
Vidal ( 1992 ) reported that some CDCs started as community action agencies during the 1960s War on Poverty . Also , in the data from the survey that NCCED conducted of CDCs in 1994 ( reported in NCCED , 1995 ) seven neighborhood or ...
less educated , more disadvantaged populations , central cities and their high - poverty neighborhoods bore the brunt of macroeconomic forces that tremendously eroded the real purchasing power of those in the bottom half of the income ...