Available Formats
Anglo-American Crossroads: Urban Planning and Research in Britain, 1940-2010
By (Author) Mark Clapson
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
5th June 2014
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
European history
Urban communities
307.12160941
Paperback
208
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
313g
The postwar British city was been shaped by many international forces during the last century, but American influences on British urban research and urban planning have been particularly significant. Beginning with debates about reconstruction during the Second World War, Anglo-American Crossroads explores how Americanisation influenced key approaches to town planning, from reconstruction after 1945 to the New Urbanism of the 1990s. Clapson pays particular attention to the relationship between urban sociological research and planning issues since the 1950s. He also addresses the ways in which American developers and planners of new communities looked to the British new towns and garden city movement for inspiration. Using a wide range of sources, from American Foundation Archives to town planning materials and urban sociologies, Anglo-American Crossroads shows that although some things went wrong in translation from the USA to Britain, there were also some important successes within a transatlantic dialogue that was more nuanced than a one-dimensional process of American hegemony.
The book offers interesting insights into an important period of cross-cultural collaboration, rightly arguing for its continued significance for urban research and planning practice -- Ali Madanipour, Newcastle University, UK * Journal of Planning Education and Research *
Mark Clapson is Reader in History in the Department of Social and Historical Studies at Westminster University, UK.