Regional Metropolitanization McDonald includes six southern cities[1] in his description of the period: Dallas-Fort Worth, the largest, with nearly 1 million population (which would have
Author: edcurmudgeon
Formation of EDOs in the Wonder Bread 1940’s-1950’s:
The Formation of Private EDOs A lesson we draw from our 1945-1950 landscape may be that its most prominent aspect is the, all too fragile
Suburban Regional Distinctions: Dolores Hayden, Alonso and Muth (McDonald),Central Place
Policy Cut Chapter 14 But suburbs are much more than this simple numerical reality. Until recently (a decade or so) most analysis and commentary tended
Western Business-Led Boosterism in the WWII Period: the CED and Local Business Alliances. Business Elites and ED Policy-Making
Was the business coalition that led western cities into boosterism and urban renewal during the late fifties and sixties identical to that described by Wilson
Post War Western-Style Suburbanization, Uneven Development (David Perry) and Myrdal
========= Western Municipal Transition to the Post War World Popular and professional consensus in the postwar pre-1960 world saw western cities as either “the
Scattered Comments on FDR’s Second Reconstructions and FSLA: Cobb’s Take on BAWI and Business Attraction as a Southern Reaction
Disguised as an objective analysis of the regional economy, the Report on Economic Conditions of the South was a manifesto for the southern liberal program