City Power: Urban Governance in a Global Age

City Power: Urban Governance in a Global Age

by Richard Schragger
City Power: Urban Governance in a Global Age

City Power: Urban Governance in a Global Age

by Richard Schragger

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Overview

Reigning theories of urban power suggest that in a world dominated by footloose transnational capital, cities have little capacity to effect social change. In City Power, Richard C. Schragger challenges the existing assumptions, arguing that cities can govern, but only if we let them. In the past decade, city leaders across the country have raised the minimum wage, expanded social services, and engaged in social welfare redistribution. These cities have not suffered capital flight. In fact, many are experiencing an economic renaissance. Schragger argues that city policies are not limited by the demands of mobile capital, but instead by constitutional restraints serving the interests of state and federal officials. Maintaining weak cities is a political choice. In this new era of global capital, the power of cities is more relevant to citizen well-being than ever before. A dynamic vision of city politics for our new urban age, City Power reveals how cities can govern despite these constitutional limits - and why we should want them to.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780190246686
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 09/01/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 288
File size: 988 KB

About the Author

Richard Schragger is the Perre Bowen Professor at the University of Virginia School of Law, where he has taught for almost fifteen years. His scholarship focuses on the intersection of constitutional law and local government law, federalism, urban policy and the constitutional and economic status of cities.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Cities, Capital, and Constitutions 1. What is the City? Building Blocks of Economic Life Byproducts and Products The City as a Process Conclusion: Mystery and Modesty 2. Decentralization and Development Competition and Growth The Historic Vulnerability of City Status What Does Decentralization Do? Conclusion: Freeing Cities from a False Constraint 3. Vertical Federalism: Making Weak Cities Legal Autonomy and Political Influence Federalism and City Power Technocracy versus Democracy Conclusion: "Things Could be Worse. I Could be a Mayor." 4. Horizontal Federalism: Encouraging Footloose Capital Inter-Municipal Border Controls Subsidizing Mobile Capital Conclusion: Economic [Dis]Integration 5. The City Redistributes I: Policy The Limits of City Limits Mandating a Living Wage Land-Use Unionism Regulating Through Contract Conclusion: Exercising Urban Power 6. The City Redistributes II: Politics Municipal Politics Matters Immobile Capital Translocal Networks Economic Localism Conclusion: The Re-emergence of the Regulatory City 7. Urban Resurgence Urban Policy and Urban Resurgence Assessing Economic Development Strategies Uncertainty and Economic Development Conclusion: Back to Basics 8. Urban Crisis Debt and Discipline Of Bailouts and Bankruptcy The Politics of Municipal Failure Conclusion: Marginal Cities Conclusion: Can Cities Govern? Notes Acknowledgements Index
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