Available Formats
Common Worlds: Paths Toward Sustainable Urbanism
By (Author) Carl A. Maida
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
23rd November 2018
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Urban communities / city life
307.76
Paperback
280
Width 153mm, Height 220mm, Spine 21mm
426g
Common Worlds: Paths Toward Sustainable Urbanism explores expert and lay approaches to sustainable urbanism, focusing on the politics and civic aesthetics of space and place; project-based learning and it consequences for the life chances of youth; and the prospect of intergenerational civic engagement. Extended case studies of sustainable urbanism describe areas undergoing demographic and socioeconomic change over the two decades since the end of the Cold War. The case studies, based upon participatory action research, are framed through the lens of transformational anthropology, which focuses on the structural factors and power relationships that contribute to social and economic disparities within a population. This approach is based upon principles of personal and group transformation, and it holds researchers responsible for collaborating with communities and groups in co-constructing research, thereby enhancing the constituents ability to carry out subsequent transformational change studies rooted in and shaped by the local community. Each case also focuses on a movement in support of aesthetic improvement, including preservation, conservation, and restoration efforts on behalf of parkland, open space, agricultural land, and marine wetlands in the face of external threats to their sustainability.
Carl Maida has brought together historical, sociological, and contemporary case studies to demonstrate how members of poor minority groups cope with crises. . . . Maida's book should be welcome in urban communities everywhere. -- Bettyann Holtzmann Kevles, Yale University
This is wide-ranging sociology, public health, and local history on a grand scale. This book, with its calm and deliberative prose and in-depth look at different kinds of urban crises, can serve as a guidebook for policymakers, health professionals, and community leaders striving to repair the torn social fabric in any urban environment. -- Robert Louis Chianese, California State University, Northridge
In Common Worlds, Carl Maida has laid the groundwork for a public anthropology centered in the notion of praxis. Over twenty years of fieldwork has produced a book that is ethnographic, philosophical, historical, but also action-oriented. It is a must-read for those interested in the ethnography of Southern California and the impact of the political economy on the lived experience of working people. -- Sam Beck, Cornell University
Carl Maida has crafted a dynamic crossover work that is penetrating, profound and highly readable. Common Worlds contains a powerful historical narrative and a mother lode of theory anthropological, environmental and geographical. He has worked among the public/private partnerships and the community coalitions as a critical participant observer and now tells their stories in a crisp comparative framework. This is a compelling book that takes us through hidden histories and unforeseen waters traversing art, economics, and everyday life; providing viable answers as to how we can confront the environmental tragedies of our time; and offering a discourse of hope that will help guide us to take back the land, and the country. -- Brian McKenna, University of Michigan, Dearborn
Carl Maida has written a book that does something most scholars hope to accomplish at one point in their careersuccessfully produce an interdisciplinary integration of a complex topic that stretches beyond ones original area of expertise. [I]t really will engage a wide variety of curious scholars--especially those with interdisciplinary urban interests. * The Pennsylvania Geographer *
Carl A. Maida is a professor at the Institute of the Environment and Sustainability in the College of Letters and Science at the University of California, Los Angeles.