From Boosterism to Qualitative Growth
- 1 July 1995
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Urban Affairs Quarterly
- Vol. 30 (6) , 868-879
- https://doi.org/10.1177/107808749503000605
Abstract
In much of the literature on local development, scholars assume a single continuum from progrowth to antigrowth. This article instead begins with the assumption that every city government is prodevelopment provided that it can have development on its own terms. A factor analysis of development policies from a large sample of cities does not support the view that city governments are either exclusively progrowth or antigrowth; no single continuum emerges. This study demonstrates that development approaches are considerably more complex, and the classifications include multifaceted strategies such as promarket (classic booster and entrepreneurial), qualitative growth, historic preservation, environmentally harmful growth, and redistributive growth (linkage and minority-equity strategies).Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Politics in Black and WhitePublished by Walter de Gruyter GmbH ,1993
- Do Growth Controls Work?: A New AssessmentJournal of the American Planning Association, 1992
- The Next Wave: Postfederal Local Economic Development StrategiesEconomic Development Quarterly, 1992
- Public Employee Unions, Reformism, and Black Employment in 1,200 American CitiesUrban Affairs Quarterly, 1991
- The Context of Radical Populism in Us Cities: A Comparative AnalysisJournal of Urban Affairs, 1991
- Type II Policy and Mandated Benefits in Economic DevelopmentUrban Affairs Quarterly, 1990
- Blacks and Hispanics in Urban PoliticsAmerican Political Science Review, 1989
- The Progressive CityPublished by Rutgers University Press ,1986
- City LimitsPublished by University of Chicago Press ,1981
- The City as a Growth Machine: Toward a Political Economy of PlaceAmerican Journal of Sociology, 1976