Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 19 segundos...
Inicio  /  Urban Science  /  Vol: 3 Núm: 2 Par: June (2019)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Human Ecology and Its Influence in Urban Theory and Housing Policy in the United States

Resumen

Human ecology, a stream of planning, was developed by Park, Burgess, and Hoyt. This theoretical model emphasized mobility and assimilation as natural paths to housing. This essay offers an analysis of its influence on urban theory and policymaking in the United States. Using planning-specific analyses, the author interrogates the relationships between structural and ecological interpretations of urban change within early planning theory. A particular focus is given to housing policies and models such as tipping point, segregation, and gentrification. These human ecological interpretations inspired and shaped urban renewal and redlining practices, along with public and affordable housing in the United States. The essay concludes with a criticism of the ecological ideas of spontaneous order and the claims of naturally balancing economic systems and conceptions of personal responsibility and choice.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Venkataramana Sridhar, Syed Azhar Ali and David J. Sample    
The Mekong River Basin is one of the world?s major transboundary basins. The hydrology, agriculture, ecology, and other watershed functions are constantly changing as a result of a variety of human activities carried out inside and by neighboring countri... ver más
Revista: Hydrology

 
Eric W. Harmsen, John R. Mecikalski, Victor J. Reventos, Estefanía Álvarez Pérez, Sopuruchi S. Uwakweh and Christie Adorno García    
In 2009, the University of Alabama-Huntsville configured their GOES satellited-based solar radiation product to include Puerto Rico, the US Virgin Islands (USVI), Dominican Republic, Haiti, Jamaica, and Cuba. The half-hourly and daily integrated data are... ver más
Revista: Hydrology

 
Jisheng Xia, Guize Luan, Fei Zhao, Zhiyan Peng, Lu Song, Shucheng Tan and Zhifang Zhao    
A coastline is the boundary zone between land and sea, an active zone of human social production activities and an area where the ecology is fragile and easy to change. The traditional method to analyze temporal and spatial changes in the coastline is to... ver más

 
Lawrence E. Stevens, Jeffrey Jenness and Jeri D. Ledbetter    
The Colorado River basin (CRB), the primary water source for southwestern North America, is divided into the 283,384 km2, water-exporting Upper CRB (UCRB) in the Colorado Plateau geologic province, and the 344,440 km2, water-receiving Lower CRB (LCRB) in... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Janine Bolliger and Janet Silbernagel    
A major goal of green infrastructure (GI) is to provide functional networks of habitats and ecosystems to maintain biodiversity long-term, while at the same time optimizing landscape and ecosystem functions and services to meet human needs. Traditionally... ver más