Title: LIBSPOSSOC 245: City and Citizenship 03312004
1LIBS/POS/SOC 245 City and Citizenship03/31/2004
- Course Agenda Today.
- Readings/Lecture.
- Urban Political Economy.
- Globalization and 21st Urban Economies.
- CNN Video Collapse of Globalization (4min).
- Progressivism, urban reform, and urban economies
- community power in late 19th early 20th
century. - Video Chicagos Union Stockyard (20min).
- Community Power and Leadership.
- Structure of Power.
- Urban restructuring. Regimes vs. Machines.
- Functional Fiefdoms.
- Mayoral leadership.
- Decentralization, Political/Social Movements and
Responsiveness. - Presentations.
2LIBS/POS/SOC 245 City and Citizenship03/31/2004
- Models of Power.
- Why does it matter.
- Elitist vs. pluralist models of power.
- Elitist model of power.
- One elite?
- How do you know elites when you see them?
- Hunter Community Power Structure (1953).
- Method.
- Perceived vs. actual power.
- Stratification theory.
- Economic power trumps political power.
- Measures reputation and perception not the
reality of power. - Unique to Atlanta?
3LIBS/POS/SOC 245 City and Citizenship03/31/2004
- Pluralist.
- Decision making rather than reputational
approach. - Dahls work.
- Discovers multiple elites w/o necessarily
overlapping domain of power and influence. - Separate and distinct networks of elites.
- Identified key role of executive centered
coalitions. - What entities comprised the coalition?
- Why pluralist?
- Negotiating of power between more or less equal
entities or groups. - Pluralism also criticized.
4LIBS/POS/SOC 245 City and Citizenship03/31/2004
- Hunter and Dahls work lay down theoretical
foundations for subsequent work. - Political Science and Sociology different
approaches and concerns. - Comparative studies.
- Meta-analysis.
- Agreement between the two approaches.
- Role of business.
- Not necessarily a unified class block.
- Exception, one industry towns.
- Steel towns (Gary, IN Pittsburgh, PA). Mining
towns (Anaconda and Butte, MT). - Competing networks of business elites.
- Merchants and developers.
- Manufacturing corporations.
- Tensions between elites whose power is mobile vs.
fixed in cities.
5LIBS/POS/SOC 245 City and Citizenship03/31/2004
- Agreement between the two approaches (continued).
- Importance of non-decisions.
- Importance of invisible decisions.
- Heresthetics (William Riker).
- Power lies in the shaping of the field of
decision making as much as the ability to decide. - Agenda setting.
- How to determine the limits of debate?
- Excluded communities must mobilize or stay
invisible. - Example
- Dahl ignored African-American community in New
Haven, CT. - African-Americans did not participate in
decisions or issues addressed. - Shows critical role for political/social movement
mobilization to reverse exclusion by omission.
6LIBS/POS/SOC 245 City and Citizenship03/31/2004
- Agreement between the two approaches (continued).
- Variety of structures of power relations.
- Temporal variation as well.
- Stratified power structures.
- One industry towns.
- Isolated small communities.
- South.
- Pluralist power structures.
- Metropolitan areas.
- Heterogeneous populations.
- Diverse economic base.
- Diverse urban demography and culture.
7LIBS/POS/SOC 245 City and Citizenship03/31/2004
- Community Power.
- Effected by the age of restructuring.
- What is age of restructuring?
- Why did it impact understandings of community
power? - Questions raised by age of restructuring.
- Why did certain business elites collaborate with
disinvestment? - Why did redevelopment projects come out of city
government? - Why large central city underclass left out of
electoral and other political dynamics (critique
of pluralism). - Why little neighborhood directed payoffs?
- Questions identify limits of stratification and
pluralist theories. - Change in theories also related to broader
political change associated with age of
restructuring.
8LIBS/POS/SOC 245 City and Citizenship03/31/2004
- Global Capital and neo-Marxism.
- Rapid growth of highly mobile global capital and
manufacturing. - Related to changes at national level in United
States, England, and other states in response to
crises triggering age of restructuring. - Cities foundational moment determines subsequent
trajectory of development. - Industrial cities (especially Northeast and Great
Lakes area) tied to mode of production that
becomes outdated. - Highly competitive capitalist market w/n United
States and globally produces race to the bottom. - Neo-Marxist view.
- Dynamics of class struggle predominant.
- Structure urban politics.
- Analytic framework cuts across levels of analysis.
9LIBS/POS/SOC 245 City and Citizenship03/31/2004
- Growth Machine Theory.
- Builds on contribution of neo-Marxism to examine
wider context of urban development. - Molotch and the growth machine.
- Identification of different elites networks.
- Community policy making dominated by coalition of
interests. - Land Holding elites.
- Bankers, developers, construction, architect,
engineers. - Growth increases property value.
- Growth may be short term or long term - coalition
verges on speculation. - Growth machine distinct from neo-Marxism.
- Maximization of rental returns not necessarily
profit. - Locally based elite.
10LIBS/POS/SOC 245 City and Citizenship03/31/2004
- Growth Machine and role of city government.
- Support for growth machine coalition premised on
the production of jobs through growth. - Intermediary role between the growth coalition
sponsored redevelopment projects and community
resistance or concern. - Jobs an ideological prop, promised but never
delivered. - Anti-growth coalitions sometimes effective.
- Alliance between neighborhood groups and
environmental groups. - Difficult to defeat a highly adaptive and well
funded growth machines. - Growth machines can move decision making to other
high jurisdictions, greater amount of resources
for law suits, etc.
11LIBS/POS/SOC 245 City and Citizenship03/31/2004
- Cities as unitary interest.
- Contrasts dramatically with the growth machine
and neo-Marxist approaches. - Mutual recognition of interest among diverse
coalition of actors. - Normative implications.
- How to determine mutual interest?
- Mutual interest as ideological cloak.
- Powerful determine interest.
- No guarantee that development projects will
benefit all mutually. - Various arguments about interests.
- Services first.
- Attracting business first.
12LIBS/POS/SOC 245 City and Citizenship03/31/2004
- Regime theory.
- Informal arrangements.
- Public and private interests.
- Management (not resolution) of conflict.
- Adapting city government, private entities, and
civil society to social change. - Mayor-centric.
- Power of eminent domain.
- Elite identification.
- Mayor identifies with other elites.
- Systemic power tying together political and
corporate elites. - Regime types.
- Entrepreneurial/corporate.
- Progressive.
13LIBS/POS/SOC 245 City and Citizenship03/31/2004
- Community power Summary.
- High variability in city power structures.
- Different degrees of centralization, economic and
cultural homogeneity. - Poletown Detroit as example of complexity of
applying theories to actual cases. - Deterministic? Neo-Marxism, growth machine,
unitary interests. - Convergence of theories.
- Public and private entities play equally
important role (at least must both be included in
theories). - Local political structures are dynamic.
- Macrostructures shape field of decision making,
but local leaders still critical. - Elites are relatively small component of the
population, especially critical decision makers. - Diversity of institutional bases of elite power.
14LIBS/POS/SOC 245 City and Citizenship03/31/2004
- Functional Fiefdoms.
- Specialization of government.
- Fragmentation of power among different
bureaucracies. - Islands of Power of functional feudalities.
- New political machines.
- Bureaucratic power not political parties.
- Interstate Highway System as example of fiefdoms.
- Development not controlled by local political
structures but rather state highway departments
shielded from political inputs. - Consequences
- Many urban communities disrupted by freeway
projects. - Destruction of mass transit systems.
- Effects on city government.
- Inhibited unified political leadership.
- City governments being strengthened to overcome
power of functional fiefdoms (homerule)
15LIBS/POS/SOC 245 City and Citizenship03/31/2004
- Mayoral Power vis-à-vis fiefdom.
- Determinants of mayoral power (capacity).
- Resources.
- City Jurisdiction of education, housing, etc.
- Mayoral jurisdiction in critical policy areas.
- Full time mayor.
- Large support staff.
- Publicity opportunities and skill.
- Actors which can be mobilized to support mayors.
- Styles of leadership.
- Ceremonial.
- Caretaker.
- Crusader.
- Strong/Program entrepreneur.
16LIBS/POS/SOC 245 City and Citizenship03/31/2004
- Strengthening of mayors.
- In response to crises of late 1960s and 1970s
realization strong mayors critical. - Dimensions of strength.
- Growth in staff.
- Dynamic individual can overcome institutional
constraints. - Examples Koch, Wilson.
- Mayor again respected position.
- Achievement of national office or prominence.
17LIBS/POS/SOC 245 City and Citizenship03/31/2004
- Nonresponsiveness.
- Avenues for forcing city governments and elite
networks to address citizens needs. - Newark Community Union Project.
- Parenti (neo-Marxist).
- Urban political process from below
- Rulers and ruled.
- Capacity to set agenda.
- No latent power, power only exists from
mobilization. - Demands must be placed on system, not responsive
to needs. - Poor lack resources.
- Demonstrations.
- Rent strikes.
- Strikes.
- Squatting.
18LIBS/POS/SOC 245 City and Citizenship03/31/2004
- Decentralization.
- Community Action Programs/Model Cities.
- Developed by federal state esp. Great Society.
- CAAs gradually have federal funding cut, then
eliminated, - Captured by local governments.
- Community control.
- Planning inputs decentralized.
- Decision making not decentralized.
- Public Education decentralized.
- Collapse of integration as solution to
educational inequality. - Reform attempted in New York and Detroit,
especially in financially strapped
African-American school districts. - Locally elected governing boards.
- Failure - decentralization survives in form of
community input. - Little city halls.
19LIBS/POS/SOC 245 City and Citizenship03/31/2004
- Decentralization (continued).
- Neighborhood Advisory Councils.
- Experiment not entirely successful complaint
about elected and or/appointed. - 1990s and 2000s Decentralization.
- Neighborhood level input/governance critical.
- Revitalization and community control.
- Control sharing mechanisms have reduced
alienation at times. - Rebirth of urban democracy?
- Citizens must be given real not symbolic power.
- City officials must encourage participation.
- Participation should be citywide.
- Bias.
- Antidotes decentralization and strong
leadership?