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Page 1: Cities Without Suburbs By David Rusk

Cities Without SuburbsBy David Rusk

Presented by

Carissa Bunning

Becky Canovan

Lyndsay Leggott

Page 2: Cities Without Suburbs By David Rusk

Key Terms

• Elastic

• Inelastic

• Metropolitan government

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Introduction

• Elastic vs. inelastic

• Characteristics

• Strategies

• Conclusions

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Characteristics of Metro Areas

• 5 categories of elasticity

– Zero

– Low

– Medium

– High

– Hyper

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For a city’s population to grow, the city must be “elastic.”

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When a city stops growing, it starts shrinking.

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Elastic cities “capture” suburban growth; inelastic cities

“contribute” to suburban growth.

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Old cities are complacent, young cities are ambitious.

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Racial prejudice has shaped growth patterns.

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Fragmented local government fosters segregation; unified local

government promotes integration.

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The smaller the income gap between city and suburb, the

greater the economic progress for the whole metropolitan community.

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Poverty is more concentrated in inelastic cities than in elastic cities.

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Characteristics of Metro Areas

• The point of no return

– City/suburb economic disparities

– The city is no longer a place in which to

invest or create jobs.

– No city past the point of return has ever

closed the economic gap with its suburbs

by as much as a single percentage point!

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Point of No Return

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Characteristics of Metro Areas

• Cities without suburbs

– 2 standards

– 23 cities

• Social equity

• Economic mobility

• Availability of resources

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Strategies for Stretching Cities

• End fiscal imbalance

• Diminish racial and economic segregation

• Promote economic progress

• Control urban sprawl

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Urban “Triage”

• Preventative medicine

• Out-patient treatment

• Major surgery

• Life-support systems

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State Government Initiatives

• Unify local governments– Consolidate city and county– Combine counties into regional governments

• Consolidation impact• Authorize annexation• Limit new municipalities• Promote regional partnerships

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Federal Government Initiatives

• Incentives for metropolitan reorganization

• Slowing urban sprawl

• Leveling the playing field

• Ending public housing contracts

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Citizen Initiatives

• Voluntary civic action

• Business organizations

• Chambers of commerce

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Conclusions and Recommendations

• Metro governments are the best solution for governing metro areas, however metro governments are not always plausible.

• In this case, racial and economic integration must occur.

• To achieve this, cooperation on the part of local, state, and federal governments is essential.

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Sources

• http://www.engr.utexas.edu/che/students/photos/austin-1.cfm