15 results
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2. THE RIGHT TO LOCAL SELF-GOVERNMENT.
- Author
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Eaton, Amasa M.
- Subjects
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LOCAL government , *ADMINISTRATIVE & political divisions , *CITIES & towns , *COMMUNITY organization , *PUBLIC administration - Abstract
The article focuses on the supremacy of the town in Rhode Island. In Rhode Island everything is done by the towns and nothing by the counties. The only county officers are the clerk of the Supreme Court and Court of Common Pleas, who has the custody of the papers of these courts when they meet in the different counties; the sheriff of the county, whose writ, however, runs throughout the state; and the keeper of the county jail, who, in other than Providence County, is the sheriff of the county.
- Published
- 1900
- Full Text
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3. On Spiral Road Networks.
- Author
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Miller, Alan J.
- Subjects
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BELTWAYS , *HIGHWAY planning , *EXPRESS highways , *STREETS , *ROADS , *VOYAGES & travels , *TRAFFIC circles , *HIGHWAY engineering , *CITIES & towns - Abstract
The networks considered in this paper consist of ring roads and equiangle spirals rotating in both directions. Journey lengths and numbers of crossings of paths are found for a circular city with uniformly and independently distributed origins and destinations of trips. The 30° spiral-and-ring network gives an average journey length 18 per cent less than a 90°-grid and 5 per cent less than a ring-and- radial network for this city. The minimum number of crossings of paths is about 14 per cent less than would be obtained if drivers could travel in straight lines between origin and destination. This minimum is obtained with a 70° spiral-and-ring network. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1967
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. A Mathematical Model for Commuter Traffic in Satellite Towns.
- Author
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Tan, T.
- Subjects
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CITIES & towns , *URBANIZATION , *COMMUTING , *ROADS , *TRAFFIC congestion , *MATHEMATICAL models , *TRAFFIC flow , *HUMAN settlements - Abstract
A simple mathematical model of a satellite town is presented in this paper. It is shown that the model contains the basic features of a satellite New Town as well as of a satellite Residential Town. The characteristics of commuter travel in a satellite Residential Town are investigated, and the size of the Central Area and of the satellite town, the distance traveled per unit area, and the average distance traveled, are evaluated. For an initial sample set of data, numerical results are presented and discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1967
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. AREA CARTOGRAM OF THE SMSA POPULATION OF THE UNITED STATES.
- Author
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Härö, A. S.
- Subjects
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CITIES & towns , *STANDARD metropolitan statistical areas , *URBAN policy , *CARTOGRAPHY , *POPULATION - Abstract
Statistical information on the size and characteristics of a population can be cartographically illustrated by the so-called value-by-area cartogram. Although geographical details and relationships must mostly be ignored, it is practical to keep to certain fixed points to help orientation. The paper presents a population cartogram of the USA with particular regard to the SMSA-population. The tendency has been to retain both the rough placings of cities and states and some features typical of the USA map. Examples are given of the practical utilization of the cartogram.
- Published
- 1968
6. WORLD REGIONS IN URBAN GEOGRAPHY.
- Author
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Holzner, Lutz
- Subjects
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URBAN geography , *CITIES & towns , *GEOGRAPHERS , *EARTH sciences , *GEOGRAPHY , *COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
Most cities are influenced by those cultures which they serve and represent. At the same time, the cultures are influenced by their respective cities. This mutual relationship among cities and cultures constitutes a complex of processes of functional interrelationships. The geographic approach to these processes leads to the delimitation of twelve major world-regions and several sub-regions that are characterized by the areally varying processes associating cities and cultures. A system of world-regions of this nature is proposed in the present paper. The proposed system places every city of the world into a hierarchy of functional regions, far beyond the city's own hinterland. Every city is then visualized as a molder and reflector of its cultural environment. In addition, the following implications of such a regional system on the field of urban geography are discussed. First, the urban geographer is able to contribute to regional studies by considering the influence the cities have upon a given region. Secondly, the urban geographer adds another aspect to the research on any city by purposely studying the city as the expression of the surrounding cultural realm. Thirdly, the proposed regions are a tool for systematic and comparative study on the regional variation of cities from one culture-region to another.
- Published
- 1967
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. LOCATIONAL AND BEHAVIOR OF MANUFACTURING FIRMS IN URBAN AREAS.
- Author
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Logan, M. I.
- Subjects
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MANUFACTURING industries , *INDUSTRIAL location , *CITIES & towns , *DECISION making , *BUSINESSMEN - Abstract
In Australia most manufacturing firms are force to make at least two kinds of location decisions, one involving the merits of the six capital cities, and the other based on variables operating inside the metropolitan areas. This paper is concerned with the behavior of the individual manufacturing firm when making the letter decision; empirical data have been obtained from three case study areas in Sydney. There is purposeful economic behavior by firms in locating, the most important influences being closeness to product market and the cost of land. The spatial effect is an arrangement of manufacturers strongly oriented to the CBD and to centrally located transport terminals. In a theoretical context, the neglect of rent considerations is a serious weakness in traditional manufacturing locating theory. The growing ability of firms to substitute among production factors also has important locational effects.
- Published
- 1966
- Full Text
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8. Social Relations of Widows in Urbanizing Societies.
- Author
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Lopata, Helena Z.
- Subjects
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SOCIAL status , *SOCIAL psychology , *URBANIZATION , *CITIES & towns , *SOCIAL history , *URBAN sociology - Abstract
This paper is concerned with the consequences of urbanization, industrialization and increasing societal complexity upon the social relations and social roles of certain community members (Winch and Blumberg, 1968). The generalizations are based on primary and secondary analyses of the life styles of widows aged 65 and over, who are located in different types of communities in various societies. The assumption is made that sociological understanding of life styles of widows in rapidly urbanizing countries will contribute to knowledge of the changes occurring not only in family roles, but in other social relations as well. The shortage of data about widows all over the world necessitates the positing of these generalizations as exploratory rather than as final statements. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1972
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Some Implications of Experimental Social Psychology for the Study of Urban Disorders.
- Author
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Geen, Russell G.
- Subjects
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SOCIAL psychology , *DISEASES , *CITIES & towns , *METHODOLOGY , *HUMAN behavior , *REVOLUTIONS , *HYPOTHESIS , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
This paper is not offered, even by implication, as an explanation for urban riots and confrontations. It is an exposition of a point of view, a methodology, and a body of evidence which hopefully may shed some light on this complex and pressing social problem. Within the social sciences several levels of analysis exist, each appropriate to the study of a certain type of problem (Devereaux, 1963; Bendix, 1963). Experimental approaches to social psychology have been particularly valuable in the analysis of individual behavior in a social context; emphasis has been on finding both the social determinants and the social implications of the behavior of an individual. While we believe that part of the explanation of collective phenomena, such as urban revolts, lies in the analysis of the behavior of individuals (cf. Brown, 1965), we do not advocate naive reductionism. We propose only to use data from the laboratory to form some operational definitions and hypotheses to guide further study and interpretation of collective events. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1971
- Full Text
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10. Formal and Informal Crime Control: An Exploratory Study of Urban, Suburban, and Rural Orientations.
- Author
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Boggs, Sarah L.
- Subjects
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CRIME prevention , *CITIES & towns , *SUBURBS , *COMMUNITIES , *PROPERTY , *DOMESTIC architecture , *CITY dwellers , *NEIGHBORHOODS - Abstract
Previous studies of public apprehension about crime indicate that people hold conflicting orientations regarding the nature and extent of the problem (McIntyre, 1967). On the one hand, they feel that throughout the country as a whole and even elsewhere in their own communities, the threat of crime, especially violent crime, is severe and increasingly so. On the other hand, however, they feel that people and property in their own neighborhoods remain relatively safe, this being the case even among residents of high crime risk areas. The issue of crime deterrence, particularly in residential areas, involves a number of dimensions, depending partly on threatened and partly on actual apprehension of offenders by actions of residents and police. The threat of apprehension exercised through informal channels has been demonstrated in the work of Maetoby et al. (1958) which shows that the crucial factor differentiating high from low delinquency areas of the same lower socio-economic level is the shared expectations among neighbors that residents would intervene to prevent the commission of offenses. More recently in a study of ghetto riots, Warren (1969) has demonstrated the importance of actual informal intervention in crime deterrence, finding that the more cohesive the neighborhood, the more likely that residents attempted to prevent looting, burning, and disorder. The significance of formal controls as deterrents to crime is somewhat more problematic. Even though crime prevention is a major manifest function of police (Banton, 1964; Bittner, 1967; Wilson, 1968), one is left to assume the degree to which formal controls do deter crime, and as Blumstein (1967), for one, has stated, "although the question (of what people are deterred from eommitring what crime by what actions of the criminal justice system) is central to much of the operation of the criminal justice system, and especially to police operation, there has been no systematic attempt to answer it." Some light is shed on this issue in studies of police response to citizen complaints which show the mutual dependence of formal and informal structures for the control of crime. Black and Reiss (1970) report that the majority (72 percent) of police encounters (at least with juveniles) stem from citizen calls rather than from police-initiated action, yet the results of victimization studies reveal that this still represents only a limited proportion of all offenses reported by citizens to police (Biderman, This paper is concerned with the issue of how people view the nature and extent of crime in their own neighborhoods, and whether they attribute their area's safety (or dangerousness) to the exercise of formal or informal controls, comparing rural, suburban, and central city residents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1971
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Income, Unemployment, and Suicide: An Occupational Study.
- Author
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Rushing, William A.
- Subjects
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INCOME , *EMPLOYMENT , *SUICIDE , *OCCUPATIONS , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *SOCIAL status , *CITIES & towns - Abstract
The significance of occupational status and income for suicide is not clear. One study indicates a positive relationship; five reveal a negative relationship; two show a higher suicide rate for very high- and very low-status occupations than for middle-status occupations; and the combined results of a study of three English cities are inconsistent. Although evidence is strongest for a negative relationship, no definitive conclusion can be made. Very likely, the relationship varies depending upon other conditions. In particular, it may vary with employment status; income may be directly related to suicide under conditions of unemployment, but inversely related under conditions of employment, or vice versa. In this paper an attempt will be made to determine whether and in what way employment status may influence the effects of income. In addition, effort will be made to determine whether unemployment is related to suicide at all income levels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1968
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. A Theory of the Jazz Community.
- Author
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Stebbins, Robert A.
- Subjects
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COMMUNITIES , *CITIES & towns , *SOCIAL groups , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL sciences , *BEHAVIOR - Abstract
One of the ubiquitous trends in social behavior is the formation of comprehensive systems of interaction known as communities. Everywhere in the world and throughout man's existence on earth, the formation of communities has been evident, from the primitive tribe to the contemporary nation-state. Among the exciting developments within the more complex communities of mankind, such as cities and nations, is the emergence of subcommunity forms which both complement and contest the arrangements of the larger society. Status communities and ethnic communities of many sorts belong among the contemporary sub-communities. It is instructive to apply this concept of sub-community formation to areas of behavior such as the worlds of art and jazz, when that behavior can be shown to approach closure and completeness with respect to a distinctive way of life. This paper deals with two major tasks: (1) the development of a special theory of the jazz community as an unique form of status community, and (2) a judgment as to the validity of referring to the social world of the jazz musician as a community. It should be mentioned that while this formulation is conceived in terms of the jazz subculture, it also has widespread application elsewhere in the area of social deviance. Since the concept of status group has its roots in the general theory of community, we shall briefly outline that concept. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1968
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Hamlets: A Typological Consideration.
- Author
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Larson, Albert J. and Garbin, A.P.
- Subjects
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PSYCHOLOGICAL typologies , *CITIES & towns , *SOCIAL groups , *SOCIAL psychology , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
In recent decades limited research attention has been given to those smallest population centers, beyond the individual farmstead, commonly referred to as hamlets. Alluding to this fact, the following statement made in 1943 by the geographer, Glenn T. Trewartha, is still indicative of the situation: "… one of the most numerous and widespread settlement types in the United States, the unincorporated hamlet, does not deserve the near oblivion that has been accorded it by geographers and other workers in the social sciences." The lack of research interest may be attributed partially to the dimunition of the farm population and rural institutions and the increasing significance of industrialization and urban development. Because of these and other changes, students of society may share the opinion that hamlets are rapidly disappearing and consequently not worthy of study. Various studies, however, are not in agreement concerning whether or not hamlets have increased or decreased in size and numbers. According to Fuguitt, the contradictory findings stem from the fact that previous researchers have not made "a clear distinction between (1) changes in population size categories over time, and (2) changes in individual places over time." In a study based on Census data, Fuguitt examined Wisconsin's incorporated small towns for the period 1880-1960. He simultaneously analyzed the two analytical components indicated above through the use of the Markov model. His general conclusion was: "While fewer small towns are being 'born' these days, they aren't 'dying,' but are growing up to be big towns, in some cases." Although it is possible, as Fuguitt also suggests, that small unincorporated places are declining in size and number, there is little reported data to suggest they are rapidly diminishing as a rural collectivity or settlement center in contemporary society. In general, the purpose of this paper is to make a contribution to our descriptive knowledge of hamlets. Initially, an effort is made to determine the main activity pursued by the principal family supporters within or near the hamlet area. Secondly, based on the major activity pursued by each resident family's primary income recipient, a statistically derived typology of hamlets is described. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1967
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Urbanism and Neighboring.
- Author
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Key, William H.
- Subjects
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COMMUNITY life , *COMMUNITIES , *COMMUNITY organization , *URBANIZATION , *CITIES & towns , *SOCIAL history , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
Almost without exception, students of community life have held that the neighborhood as a basis for association disappears as the degree of urbanization increases. Simmel and Park provided the early theoretical basis; Bernard, McClenhan, Roper, Sweetser, and others, conducted early empirical studies which provided the factual basis for Wirth's later restatement of the Simmel-Park position. After this initial research, which could be characterized as "Chicago style," interest in the problem waned. Recently there has been a resurgence of interest in the problems of urbanization including studies of neighboring as well as other forms of social participation. On the basis of these theoretical statements and empirical studies, most students of the community have continued to point out that contacts with neighbors are less frequent and more superficial in the city than they are in the country. Unfortunately, however well conceived and well executed the empirical studies in this area have been, they do not provide a factual basis for the comparative statements given in most urban-sociology textbooks. The research has been confined to studies of one neighborhood, or two or more neighborhoods in the same city. In addition, none of the studies uses the same "valid" scale for populations from various points on a rural-urban continuum. The problem of testing the above hypothesis, i.e., that there is a negative relationship between urbanism and frequency or quality of neighborhood contacts, is two-fold: to develop a "valid" scale applicable to people located at any point along the urbanism continuum; and to interview a sample of people located at various points along that continuum. Work that tests this hypothesis and is aimed at solving both the problems outlined above is the interest of this paper. Because of the resurgence of interest in the area and a possibly wider use for the scale, it was decided to report these results even though the full work was completed almost eleven years ago. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1965
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. THE BASES OF URBANISM IN TEXAS.
- Author
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Rosenquist, Carl M. and Moore, Harry E.
- Subjects
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CITIES & towns , *URBAN policy , *CASE studies , *SOCIOLOGISTS , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
The article discusses the basis of urbanism in Texas. The paper presented in the article is in the nature of a preliminary report of a study begun some months ago on the subject of urbanism in Texas. While it is necessarily incomplete, the facts already secured justify presentation of certain conclusions as to the causal factors involved in the location and development of cities in this state. No particular method is utilized in the study to the exclusion of others. Geography is consulted for the facts about the natural environment, to which human life must inevitably adapt itself. History yields information about events, many apparently accidental, which have figured in the location of settlements, later expanded into cities. Statistical correlations show connections between various phenomena, from which the relationship of cause and effect may be inferred. Case studies of selected units give the necessary detail for a sympathetic understanding and appreciation of the interplay of forces between individual and community. The plan of the study as a whole is cast on broad lines. Taking aggregation of population as the prerequisite of urbanism, the investigators have undertaken, as their first task, to present a picture of growth of urban population in Texas. This is obviously necessary for a delineation of the field. The second task involves the discovery, classification and evaluation of the factors responsible for the location and increase of urban aggregations.
- Published
- 1933
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