All Stories

  1. “Place or Character” of a Business: Environmental Criminology and Negligent Security Litigation
  2. Hazard Experience, Geophysical Vulnerability, and Flood Risk Perceptions in a Postdisaster City, the Case of New Orleans
  3. The Elusive Recovery: Post-Hurricane Katrina Rebuilding During the First Decade, 2005–2015Standing in the Need: Culture, Comfort, and Coming Home after Katrina, by BrowneKatherine E.Austin: University of Texas Press, 2015. $24.95 paper. ISBN: 978147730...
  4. Coastal Restoration as Contested Terrain: Climate Change and the Political Economy of Risk Reduction in Louisiana
  5. Crisis Cities: Disaster and Redevelopment in New York and New Orleans By Kevin Fox Gotham and Miriam Greenberg Oxford University Press. 2014. 352 pp., $ 24.95
  6. Kansas City and How It Grew, 1822–2011
  7. Mechanisms of mutation: policy mobilities and the Gulf Opportunity (GO) Zone
  8. Re-anchoring capital in disaster-devastated spaces: Financialisation and the Gulf Opportunity (GO) Zone programme
  9. Crisis Cities
  10. Comparing the Incomparable
  11. “Tighten Your Belts and Bite the Bullet”
  12. Constructing the Tabula Rasa
  13. Crisis as Opportunity
  14. Rebranding the “Big Apple” and the “Big Easy”
  15. Conclusion: Lessons in the Wake of Crisis
  16. Landscapes of Risk and Resilience: From Lower Manhattan to the Lower Ninth Ward
  17. Racialization and Rescaling: Post‐Katrina Rebuilding and the Louisiana Road Home Program
  18. Reinforcing Inequalities: The Impact of the CDBG Program on Post-Katrina Rebuilding
  19. Constructions of Resilience: Ethnoracial Diversity, Inequality, and Post-Katrina Recovery, the Case of New Orleans
  20. Dilemmas of Disaster Zones: Tax Incentives and Business Reinvestment in the Gulf Coast after Hurricanes Katrina and Rita
  21. Region: Planning The Future Of The Twin Cities, by MyronOrfield and Thomas F.Luce, Jr. Minneapolis and London: University of Minnesota Press, 2010. ISBN: 978-0-8166-6556-3, 354 pp. (hardback)
  22. Disaster, Inc.: Privatization and Post-Katrina Rebuilding in New Orleans
  23. Creating Liquidity Out of Spatial Fixity
  24. Urbanization
  25. Reconsidering the New Normal: Trauma, Vulnerability & Resilience in Post-Katrina New Orleans
  26. Reconsidering the New Normal: Trauma, Vulnerability & Resilience in Post-Katrina New Orleans
  27. Reconstructing the Big Easy: racial heritage tourism in New Orleans
  28. Coupled Vulnerability and Resilience: the Dynamics of Cross-Scale Interactions in Post-Katrina New Orleans
  29. Urban Trauma and Neighborhood Resilience: Insights From the New Orleans Urban Long-Term Research Area (ULTRA) Project
  30. Authentic New Orleans: Tourism, Culture, and Race in the Big Easy . By Kevin Fox  Gotham. New York: New York University Press, 2007. Pp. xiii +281.
  31. Creating Liquidity out of Spatial Fixity: The Secondary Circuit of Capital and the Subprime Mortgage Crisis
  32. Why we go Home Again
  33. Fragile Rights within Cities: Government, Housing, and Fairness . Edited by John Goering. Lanham, Md.: Rowman & Littlefield, 2007. Pp. ix+310. $99.00 (cloth); $37.95 (paper).
  34. Critical theory and Katrina
  35. Anthony J. Stanonis, Creating the Big Easy: New Orleans and the Emergence of Modern Tourism, 1918–1945. Athens and London: University of Georgia Press, 2006. 344pp. 10 photos. 3 figures. Bibliography. $59.95 hbk, $22.95 pbk
  36. The Secondary Circuit of Capital Reconsidered: Globalization and the U.S. Real Estate Sector1
  37. Public Dollars, Private Stadiums: The Battle over Building Sports Stadiums . By Kevin J.  Delaney and Rick  Eckstein. New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press. Pp. x+240. $22.95 (paper); $60.00 (cloth).
  38. HOPE VI, Section 8, and the Contradictions of Low-Income Housing Policy
  39. Theorizing urban spectacles
  40. Tourism Gentrification: The Case of New Orleans' Vieux Carre (French Quarter)
  41. Tourism from Above and Below: Globalization, Localization and New Orleans's Mardi Gras
  42. HOPE VI, New Urbanism, and the Utility of Frames: A Reply to Melendez and Coats
  43. Working‐Class Heroes: Protecting Home, Community, and Nation in a Chicago Neighborhood . By Maria  Kefalas. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 2003. Pp. xiv+203. $49.95 (cloth); $19.95 (paper).
  44. Book Reviews
  45. Framing the Urban: Struggles Over HOPE VI and New Urbanism in a Historic City
  46. Toward an understanding of the spatiality of urban poverty: the urban poor as spatial actors
  47. Using Space: Agency and Identity in a Public–Housing Development
  48. Marketing Mardi Gras: Commodification, Spectacle and the Political Economy of Tourism in New Orleans
  49. Beyond Invasion and Succession: School Segregation, Real Estate Blockbusting, and the Political Economy of Neighborhood Racial Transition
  50. Come Lovely and Soothing Death: The Right to Die Movement in the United States
  51. Susan J. Popkin, Victoria E. Gwiasda, Lynn M. Olson, Dennis P. Rosenbaum, and Larry Buron. The Hidden War: Crime and the Tragedy of Public Housing in Chicago
  52. A City without Slums: Urban Renewal, Public Housing, and Downtown Revitalization in Kansas City, Missouri
  53. GROWTH MACHINE UP-LINKS: URBAN RENEWAL AND THE RISE AND FALL OF A PRO-GROWTH COALITION IN A U.S. CITY
  54. Urban Space, Restrictive Covenants and the Origins of Racial Residential Segregation in a US City, 1900-50
  55. Racialization and the State: The Housing Act of 1934 and the Creation of the Federal Housing Administration
  56. Empowerment in Chicago: Grassroots Participation in Economic Development and Poverty Alleviation
  57. Political Opportunity, Community Identity, and the Emergence of a Local Anti-Expressway Movement
  58. Political Opportunity, Community Identity, and the Emergence of a Local Anti-Expressway Movement
  59. Race, Mortgage Lending and Loan Rejections in a U.S. City
  60. Suburbia under siege: Low‐income housing and racial conflict in metropolitan Kansas City, 1970–1990
  61. Blind Faith in the Free Market: Urban Poverty, Residential Segregation, and Federal Housing Retrenchment, 1970?1995
  62. Social Thought and Research, Volume 20, Number 1amp;2 (1997): Book Review
  63. Narrative Analysis and the New Historical Sociology
  64. A Study in American Agitation: J. Edgar Hoover's Symbolic Construction of the Communist Menace
  65. Kansas City, Missouri
  66. New Urban Sociology
  67. Trauma as Entertainment
  68. Civil Society
  69. State
  70. Urban redevelopment, past and present
  71. Housing Policy
  72. Representations of space and urban planning in a post-World War II U.S. City
  73. Ethnic heritage tourism and global–local connections in New Orleans
  74. From the culture industry to the society of the spectacle: Critical theory and the situationist international
  75. Abstract space, social space, and the redevelopment of public housing
  76. Redevelopment for whom and for what purpose? A research agenda for urban redevelopment in the twenty first century
  77. Residential Segregation and Federal Housing Policy: A Comparative Analysis of Section 235 and Section 8