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The Adapted City: Institutional Dynamics and Structural Change
Authored by: H. George Frederickson; Gary A. Johnson; Curtis H. Wood
 




Cloth ISBN: 978-0-7656-1264-9
USD: $99.95 minus 20%
Paper ISBN: 978-0-7656-1265-6
USD: $39.95 minus 20%
Available to all countries

Information:
 216pp. Tables, figures, bibliography, index.

Publication Date: September 2003.  

Description: This grounbreaking book will redefine the way we look at American urban government. It considers how and why cities change their governing arrangements -- and the implications for cities of the future.

Previous categorizations of urban governing arrangements have included the "political city" (traditional elected mayor/city council) and the "administrative city" (city manager appointed by city council). The authors argue that in recent years most cities have adapted and changed their structures so much to accommodate contemporary demands that the traditional models no longer reflect reality. It's time for a new paradigm -- their model of the adapted city that represents how local government really works.

The book provides rich detail and numerous case studies that show how actual cities have changed and adapted their structure to fit changing times and citizen demands. However, the primary strength of this work is its focus on the implications for flourishing urban life and politics in the future.


Selected Contents:
Tables and Figures
Preface
1. Introduction
2. Theories of Institutional Dynamics
3. Political and Administrative Cities
4. The Evolution of Political Cities
5. The Evolution of Administrative Cities
6. Model City Charters and Institutional Dynamics
7. Adapted Cities
8. Probing the Complexity of Adapted Cities
9. The Conciliated City
10. Conclusion
References
Index
About the Authors


Review(s): This work is a valuable update on municipal forms and highlights the creativity of local officials and citizens in reconstructing governments to meet their understood needs. Recommended. Choice Vol. 41 No. 8

Although the revelation that the classical models of local government structure have changed is not new, the authors are the first to comprehensively offer the evidence about the changes and what the city structures look like today. This is an important contribution to the literature on the evolution of local governmental structure. American Review of Public Administration