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Analytics can make government work better-this book shows you how.
“A Practical Guide to Analytics for Governments” provides demonstrations of real-world analytics applications for legislators, policy-makers, and support staff at the federal, state, and local levels. Big data and analytics are transforming industries across the board, and government can reap many of those same benefits by applying analytics to processes and programs already in...
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World Cities and Nation States takes a global perspective to show how national governments and states/provinces/regions continue to play a decisive, and often positive, partnership role with world cities. The 16 chapter book — comprised of two introductory chapters, 12 central chapters that draw on case studies, and two summary chapters - draws on over 40 interviews with national ministers, city government officials, business leaders and expert...
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The rapid pace and changing nature of twenty-first century urbanization as well as the diversity of global urban experiences calls for new theories and new methodologies in urban studies. In “Comparative Urbanism: Tactics for Global Urban Studies”, Jennifer Robinson proposes grounds for reformatting comparative urban practice and offers a wide range of tactics for researching global urban experiences. The focus is on inventing new concepts as...
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"A lively, unique, and accessible cultural history of modern cities--from suburbs, downtown districts, and exurban sprawl, to shopping malls and "sustainable" developments--that allows us to view them through the planning, design, architects, and movements that inspired, created, and shaped them. Dream Cities explores our cities in a new way--as expressions of ideas, often conflicting, about how we should live, work, play, make, buy, and believe....
Author
Pub. Date
2020.
Physical Desc
x, 442 pages : illustrations (chiefly color) ; 25 cm
Description
"From a brilliant young historian, a colourful journey through 7,000 years and twenty-six world cities that shows how urban living has been the spur and incubator to humankind's greatest innovations. In the two hundred millennia of our existence, nothinghas shaped us more profoundly than the city. Ben Wilson, author of bestselling and award-winning books on British history, now tells the grand, glorious story of how city living has allowed human culture...
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Originally published in 1933, The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes was one of the first pieces of Sherlockian scholarship to appear on the scene.
This edition is Vincent Starrett's revised 1960 work, with two of the chapters previously published now substantially rewritten for the present edition-including ending the book with a pastiche-and it is this volume that now sits on the shelves of many a Sherlockian.
Well-written, insightful and informative,...
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Henri Pirenne (1862–1935) was professor emeritus at Ghent University and one of the world's leading historians. His books include Mohammed and Charlemagne and Economic and Social History of Medieval Europe. Michael McCormick is the Francis Goelet Professor of Medieval History at Harvard University.
Nearly a century after it was first published in 1925, Medieval Cities remains one of the most provocative works of medieval history ever written....
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A visionary survey of urbanism from the Middle Ages to the late 1930s, with a new introduction by Thomas Fisher Considered among the greatest works of Lewis Mumford-a prolific historian, sociologist, philosopher of technology, and longtime architecture critic for the New Yorker-The Culture of Cities is a call for communal action to rebuild the urban world on a sounder human foundation. First published in 1938, this radical investigation into the human...
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"An online obituary writer. A young mother with a dark secret. A woman waging a solo campaign against rodents--neighbors, separated only by the thin walls of a low-cost housing complex in the once bustling industrial center of Vacca Vale, Indiana. Welcome to the Rabbit Hutch. Ethereally beautiful and formidably intelligent, Blandine shares her apartment with three teenage boys she neither likes nor understands, all, like her, now aged out of the state...
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Scale in cities is relative and absolute. It has the ability to make us feel at home in the world or alien from it, connected or disconnected. Both large and small scale in cities can be beautiful, both are right, neither is wrong. Whilst accepting that prescription is no answer, 'getting the scale right' — at an intuitive and sensual level — is a fundamental part of the magic of architecture and urban design. “Touching the City” explores...
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Ethical dilemmas and value conflicts affect cities globally, but urban leaders and citizens often avoid confronting them directly and instead view the governance of cities as primarily an administrative task or, even worse, a merely political one. Timothy Beatley challenges readers to consider the issues in our cities not simply as legal or economic problems but as moral ones, asking readers "How can a city become more ethical?" Beatley unearths,...
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Lucy Lilian Notestein's Hill Towns of Italy is a lyrical and evocative exploration of Italy's picturesque hilltop villages, capturing the charm, history, and cultural richness of these timeless landscapes. With keen observation and poetic prose, Notestein takes readers on a journey through the cobbled streets, ancient walls, and vibrant traditions that define these remarkable towns.
From Tuscany's rolling hills to the rugged regions of Umbria and...
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Some know Oklahoma's Black towns as historic communities that thrived during the Jim Crow era-this is only part of the story. In this book, Karla Slocum shows that the appeal of these towns is more than their past. Drawing on interviews and observations of town life spanning several years, Slocum reveals that people from diverse backgrounds are still attracted to the communities because of the towns' remarkable history as well as their racial identity...





