Struggling Giants: City-Region Governance in London, New York, Paris, and Tokyo
By (Author) Paul Kantor
By (author) Christian Lefvre
By (author) Asato Saito
By (author) H. V. Savitch
University of Minnesota Press
University of Minnesota Press
15th July 2012
United States
General
Non Fiction
Urban and municipal planning and policy
320.8
Paperback
344
Width 178mm, Height 254mm, Spine 36mm
Throughout the past thirty years a small number of city-regions have achieved unprecedented global status in the world economy while undergoing radical changes. Struggling Giants examines the transformation of four of the most significant metropolises: London, New York, Paris, and Tokyo. This volume analyzes the thorniest issues these sprawling city-regions have faced, including ameliorating social problems through public policies, the effect of globalization on local governance, and the relationships between local, regional, and national institutions.
Three critical themes frame Struggling Giants. The first is the continuing struggle for governability in the midst of regional governmental fragmentation. The second theme is how the city-regions fight to manage powerful political biases. Policy-making is often selective, the authors find, and governments are more responsive to economic exigencies than to social or environmental needs. Finally, these city-regions are shown to be strong economic leaders in part because they are able to changealthough the authors reveal that pragmatism and piecemeal policy solutions can still prevail.
Paul Kantor is emeritus professor of political science at Fordham University.
Christian Lefvre is director of the French Institute of Urban Affairs and professor at the University of Paris Est, LATTS.
Asato Saito is an independent scholar working in Tokyo.
H. V. Savitch is Brown and Williamson Distinguished Research Professor at the University of Louisville.
Andy Thornley is emeritus professor of urban planning at the London School of Economics.