From Tenements to the Taylor Homes: In Search of an Urban Housing Policy in Twentieth-Century America

Author:   John F. Bauman (Univ. of Southern Maine) ,  Roger Biles (Professor Emeritus, Illinois State University) ,  Kristin M. Szylvian (St. John’s University)
Publisher:   Pennsylvania State University Press
ISBN:  

9780271020129


Pages:   304
Publication Date:   01 August 2000
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained


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From Tenements to the Taylor Homes: In Search of an Urban Housing Policy in Twentieth-Century America


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Author:   John F. Bauman (Univ. of Southern Maine) ,  Roger Biles (Professor Emeritus, Illinois State University) ,  Kristin M. Szylvian (St. John’s University)
Publisher:   Pennsylvania State University Press
Imprint:   Pennsylvania State University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.594kg
ISBN:  

9780271020129


ISBN 10:   0271020121
Pages:   304
Publication Date:   01 August 2000
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Out of Print
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained

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Reviews

Well written and researched, jargon free, and superbly organized, the volume will appeal to a broad academic audience and to general readers who are interested in housing and urban development. </p> A. Scott Henderson, <em>History</em></p>


Well written and researched, jargon free, and superbly organized, the volume will appeal to a broad academic audience and to general readers who are interested in housing and urban development. A. Scott Henderson, History


Well written and researched, jargon free, and superbly organized, the volume will appeal to a broad academic audience and to general readers who are interested in housing and urban development. --A. Scott Henderson, History


These 12 historical essays explore the roots and evolution of federal low-income housing policy. Relying on primary sources, contributors take readers from Progressive-Era housing reform to the recent flirtation with New Urbanism. Arranged chronologically, individual chapters address (among many other themes) wartime housing, postwar public housing, the rise of federal mortgage subsidies and suburbanization, racial discrimination, inner-city decline, and the move to community-based housing programs. Every chapter is well researched and well written, and the book has a coherence not often found in edited collections. An introduction frames the issues and an epilogue briefly reviews current policies. Useful chronology, bibliographic essay, and numerous illustrations. This is an impressive book; its exemplary essays provide the historical overview that researchers and policy makers need to function effectively. It would also make an outstanding classroom text. --R.A. Beauregard, Choice


This volume brings together a talented group of historians known for their work on the city and its housing. The result is an important book that also is assignable in undergraduate and graduate courses. It should emerge as the standard in the field for many years to come. --Mark H. Rose, Florida Atlantic University Well written and researched, jargon free, and superbly organized, the volume will appeal to a broad academic audience and to general readers who are interested in housing and urban development. --A. Scott Henderson, History These 12 historical essays explore the roots and evolution of federal low-income housing policy. Relying on primary sources, contributors take readers from Progressive-Era housing reform to the recent flirtation with New Urbanism. Arranged chronologically, individual chapters address (among many other themes) wartime housing, postwar public housing, the rise of federal mortgage subsidies and suburbanization, racial discrimination, inner-city decline, and the move to community-based housing programs. Every chapter is well researched and well written, and the book has a coherence not often found in edited collections. An introduction frames the issues and an epilogue briefly reviews current policies. Useful chronology, bibliographic essay, and numerous illustrations. This is an impressive book; its exemplary essays provide the historical overview that researchers and policy makers need to function effectively. It would also make an outstanding classroom text. --R.A. Beauregard, Choice This volume brings together a talented group of historians known for their work on the city and its housing. The result is an important book that also is assignable in undergraduate and graduate courses. It should emerge as the standard in the field for many years to come. Mark H. Rose, Florida Atlantic University Well written and researched, jargon free, and superbly organized, the volume will appeal to a broad academic audience and to general readers who are interested in housing and urban development. A. Scott Henderson, History These 12 historical essays explore the roots and evolution of federal low-income housing policy. Relying on primary sources, contributors take readers from Progressive-Era housing reform to the recent flirtation with New Urbanism. Arranged chronologically, individual chapters address (among many other themes) wartime housing, postwar public housing, the rise of federal mortgage subsidies and suburbanization, racial discrimination, inner-city decline, and the move to community-based housing programs. Every chapter is well researched and well written, and the book has a coherence not often found in edited collections. An introduction frames the issues and an epilogue briefly reviews current policies. Useful chronology, bibliographic essay, and numerous illustrations. This is an impressive book; its exemplary essays provide the historical overview that researchers and policy makers need to function effectively. It would also make an outstanding classroom text. R.A. Beauregard, Choice Well written and researched, jargon free, and superbly organized, the volume will appeal to a broad academic audience and to general readers who are interested in housing and urban development. --A. Scott Henderson, History These 12 historical essays explore the roots and evolution of federal low-income housing policy. Relying on primary sources, contributors take readers from Progressive-Era housing reform to the recent flirtation with New Urbanism. Arranged chronologically, individual chapters address (among many other themes) wartime housing, postwar public housing, the rise of federal mortgage subsidies and suburbanization, racial discrimination, inner-city decline, and the move to community-based housing programs. Every chapter is well researched and well written, and the book has a coherence not often found in edited collections. An introduction frames the issues and an epilogue briefly reviews current policies. Useful chronology, bibliographic essay, and numerous illustrations. This is an impressive book; its exemplary essays provide the historical overview that researchers and policy makers need to function effectively. It would also make an outstanding classroom text. --R.A. Beauregard, Choice This volume brings together a talented group of historians known for their work on the city and its housing. The result is an important book that also is assignable in undergraduate and graduate courses. It should emerge as the standard in the field for many years to come. --Mark H. Rose, Florida Atlantic University Well written and researched, jargon free, and superbly organized, the volume will appeal to a broad academic audience and to general readers who are interested in housing and urban development. A. Scott Henderson, History These 12 historical essays explore the roots and evolution of federal low-income housing policy. Relying on primary sources, contributors take readers from Progressive-Era housing reform to the recent flirtation with New Urbanism. Arranged chronologically, individual chapters address (among many other themes) wartime housing, postwar public housing, the rise of federal mortgage subsidies and suburbanization, racial discrimination, inner-city decline, and the move to community-based housing programs. Every chapter is well researched and well written, and the book has a coherence not often found in edited collections. An introduction frames the issues and an epilogue briefly reviews current policies. Useful chronology, bibliographic essay, and numerous illustrations. This is an impressive book; its exemplary essays provide the historical overview that researchers and policy makers need to function effectively. It would also make an outstanding classroom text. R.A. Beauregard, Choice This volume brings together a talented group of historians known for their work on the city and its housing. The result is an important book that also is assignable in undergraduate and graduate courses. It should emerge as the standard in the field for many years to come. Mark H. Rose, Florida Atlantic University Well written and researched, jargon free, and superbly organized, the volume will appeal to a broad academic audience and to general readers who are interested in housing and urban development. A. Scott Henderson, History These 12 historical essays explore the roots and evolution of federal low-income housing policy. Relying on primary sources, contributors take readers from Progressive-Era housing reform to the recent flirtation with New Urbanism. Arranged chronologically, individual chapters address (among many other themes) wartime housing, postwar public housing, the rise of federal mortgage subsidies and suburbanization, racial discrimination, inner-city decline, and the move to community-based housing programs. Every chapter is well researched and well written, and the book has a coherence not often found in edited collections. An introduction frames the issues and an epilogue briefly reviews current policies. Useful chronology, bibliographic essay, and numerous illustrations. This is an impressive book; its exemplary essays provide the historical overview that researchers and policy makers need to function effectively. It would also make an outstanding classroom text. R.A. Beauregard, Choice This volume brings together a talented group of historians known for their work on the city and its housing. The result is an important book that also is assignable in undergraduate and graduate courses. It should emerge as the standard in the field for many years to come. Mark H. Rose, Florida Atlantic University Well written and researched, jargon free, and superbly organized, the volume will appeal to a broad academic audience and to general readers who are interested in housing and urban development. --A. Scott Henderson, History These 12 historical essays explore the roots and evolution of federal low-income housing policy. Relying on primary sources, contributors take readers from Progressive-Era housing reform to the recent flirtation with New Urbanism. Arranged chronologically, individual chapters address (among many other themes) wartime housing, postwar public housing, the rise of federal mortgage subsidies and suburbanization, racial discrimination, inner-city decline, and the move to community-based housing programs. Every chapter is well researched and well written, and the book has a coherence not often found in edited collections. An introduction frames the issues and an epilogue briefly reviews current policies. Useful chronology, bibliographic essay, and numerous illustrations. This is an impressive book; its exemplary essays provide the historical overview that researchers and policy makers need to function effectively. It would also make an outstanding classroom text. --R.A. Beauregard, Choice This volume brings together a talented group of historians known for their work on the city and its housing. The result is an important book that also is assignable in undergraduate and graduate courses. It should emerge as the standard in the field for many years to come. --Mark H. Rose, Florida Atlantic University


Author Information

John F. Bauman is Research Professor of Community Planning and Development at the Muskie School of Public Policy, University of Southern Maine and Professor of History, California University of Pennsylvania. He is the author of Public Housing, Race and Renewal: Urban Planning in Philadelphia, 1920–1974 (1987) and, with Thomas Coode, In the Eye of the Great Depression: New Deal Reporters and the Agony of the American People (1988). Roger Biles is Professor of History at East Carolina University. He has written several books, including Richard J. Daley: Politics, Race, and the Governing of Chicago (1995) and The South and the New Deal (1994). Kristin M. Szylvian is Assistant Professor of History at Western Michigan University.

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