Publication | Closed Access
"The Myth of the North American City" Reconsidered
41
Citations
24
References
1996
Year
Historical GeographyLocal Economic DevelopmentSocial SciencesU.s. Local GovernanceUrban GovernancePolitical EconomyUrban HistoryUrban PoliticsUrban TheoryLocal GovernancePublic PolicyEconomicsUrban PolicyUrban Economic DevelopmentUrban PlanningU.s. CitiesNorth American CityUrban GeographyHumanitiesUrban DesignPolitical GeographyUrban EconomicsBusinessUrban Political EconomistsPolitical Science
Urban political economists observe that growth seeking dominates Canadian and U.S. local governance. Others believe Canada's collectivist culture exempts cities from the privatistic policies common in the United States. The authors argue that local constitutional regimes (the legal definition of cities, rules about private property, and federalism) best explain patterns of governance. Inducements shape urban development policy in both countries, but U.S. cities generally compete independently for growth, whereas provinces more often direct Canadian urban growth strategies. Provinces may reduce interlocal competition, but they may also move the locus of urban growth politics upward or stifle progressive initiatives.
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