bookUniversity of Georgia Press eBooksJan 1, 2009Closed access

Social Justice and the City

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Abstract

Throughout his distinguished and influential career, David Harvey has defined and redefined the relationship between politics, capitalism, and the social aspects of geographical theory. Laying out Harvey’s position that geography could not remain objective in the face of urban poverty and associated ills, Social Justice and the City is perhaps the most widely cited work in the field. Harvey analyzes core issues in city planning and policy—employment and housing location, zoning, transport costs, concentrations of poverty—asking in each case about the relationship between social justice and space. How, for example, do built-in assumptions about planning reinforce existing distributions of income? Rather than…

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1,095
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54.37
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100%
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Authors

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Appeal
  • Technocracy
  • Poverty
  • Capitalism
  • Economic Justice
  • Sociology
  • Politics
  • Space (punctuation)
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