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Crossing Great Divides

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Crossing Great Divides Synopsis

Ranging across two centuries of American history, Crossing Great Divides argues that the habit of construing city and country as opposites is at the root of our current environmental and political disorder. This oversimplifying dualism has distorted how we planned cities, our patterns of production and consumption, how we deal with waste, and how urban and rural populations perceive each other.

Conventional urban environmental reform has made modern city life possible, but it has done little to limit the despoliation of distant places. Nevertheless, the successes of urban environmental reform remind us of what is possible.

John Fairfield concludes with a case study of Phoenix, Arizona to demonstrate this dysfunctional relationship between city and country while developing a sympathetic critique of the Green New Deal. He suggests how we might bridge the "great divide" as we face the daunting challenges the twenty-first century is pressing upon us.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9781439925720
Publication date:
Author: John D Fairfield
Publisher: Temple University Press
Format: Paperback
Pagination: 316 pages
Series: Urban Life, Landscape and Policy
Genres: Urban communities
Social and cultural history
Conservation of the environment
Urban and municipal planning and policy