bookMacat Library eBooksJul 5, 2017Closed access

The Death and Life of Great American Cities

MFMartin FullerRMRyan Moore
Indexed incrossref

Abstract

Despite having no formal training in urban planning, Jane Jacobs deftly explores the strengths and weaknesses of policy arguments put forward by American urban planners in the era after World War II. They believed that the efficient movement of cars was of more value in the development of US cities than the everyday lives of the people living there. By carefully examining their relevance in her 1961 book, The Death and Life of Great American Cities, Jacobs dismantles these arguments by highlighting their shortsightedness. She evaluates the information to hand and comes to a very different conclusion, that urban planners ruin great cities, because they don’t understand that it is a city’s social interaction…

Citation impact

1,132
total citations
FWCI
82.54
Percentile
100%
References
0
Citations per year

Authors

2
  • MF
    Martin FullerCorresponding
  • RM
    Ryan Moore

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • History
  • Gerontology
  • Medicine
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