Laws of the Landscape: How Policies Shape Cities in Europe and America

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Brookings Institution Press, 1999 M04 1 - 142 pages

For decades, concerns have been raised about the consequences of relentless suburban expansion in the United States. But so far, government programs to control urban sprawl have had little effect in slowing it down, much less stopping it. In this book, Pietro S. Nivola raises important questions about the continued suburbanization of America: Is suburban growth just the result of market forces, or have government policies helped induce greater sprawl? How much of the government intervention has been undesirable, and what has been beneficial? And, if suburban growth is to be controlled, what changes in public policies would be not only effective, but practical?

Nivola addresses these questions by comparing sprawling U.S. metropolitan areas to compact development patterns in Europe. He contrasts the effects of traditional urban programs, as well as "accidental urban policies" that have a profound if commonly unrecognized impact on cities, including national tax systems, energy conservation efforts, agricultural supports, and protection from international commerce.

Nivola also takes a hard look at the traditional solutions of U.S. urban policy agenda involving core-area reconstruction projects, mass transit investments, "smart" growth controls, and metropolitan organizational rearrangements, and details the reasons why they often don't work. He concludes by recommending reforms for key U.S. policies--from taxes to transportation to federal regulations--based on the successes and failures of the European experience.

Brookings Metropolitan Series

 

Selected pages

Contents

Introduction
1
Big and Turbulent
4
The NotSoInvisible Hand
12
So What?
35
Shopworn Solutions
52
Eight Suggestions
65
Summing Up
88
Notes
93
Index
121
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About the author (1999)

Pietro S. Nivola is a vice president of the Brookings Institution, where he is the director of Governance Studies. Among his previous books are "Tense Commandments: Federal Prescriptions and City Problems" (Brookings, 2002) and "Agenda for the Nation," coedited with Henry J. Aaron and James M. Lindsay (Brookings, 2003).

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