《St. Louis’s “urban prairie”: Vacant land and the potential for revitalization》
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- 作者
- Christopher G. Prener;Taylor Harris Braswell;Daniel J. Monti
- 来源
- JOURNAL OF URBAN AFFAIRS,Vol.42,Issue3,P.371-389
- 语言
- 英文
- 关键字
- 作者单位
- Saint Louis University
- 摘要
- As part of a larger project to understand the relative health and disorder of St. Louis's neighborhoods, this article presents estimates of the number of vacant parcels in the city. These estimates, which are considerably higher than previously published ones, are heavily concentrated in the city’s disinvested and segregated north side. We term this heavy concentration of vacancy urban prairie. After accounting for other factors as well as possible sources of statistical error, we identify both long-term population loss since 1970 and the proportion of African American residents as significant covariates associated with the amount of urban prairie land per neighborhood. These high levels of concentrated vacancy lead us to critique the city’s existing approaches as being too limited in scope and to suggest a range of possibilities for revitalizing portions of northern St. Louis while allowing prairie land to continue to exist in others.Additional informationAuthor informationChristopher G. PrenerChristopher G. Prener is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at Saint Louis University. He is a graduate of St. Lawrence University with a PhD from Northeastern University in Boston. Chris is an urban and medical sociologist with an interest in mixed methods research designs that incorporate spatial data. He is currently developing a book manuscript entitled Medicine at the Margins that explores the ways in which urban emergency medical services work is impacted by and affects the neighborhoods where it occurs. He is also leading research efforts to understand sociospatial patterns of crime, neighborhood disorder, and inequality in St. Louis.Taylor Harris BraswellTaylor Harris Braswell is an environmental sociology PhD student at Northeastern University. His primary interest is in using geographic information science tools to study the political economy of urbanization and natural resource extraction. He is particularly focused on the linkages between urbanization and energy infrastructures, as well as how urbanization processes create conflictual land uses on urban peripheries. Before joining Northeastern, Taylor earned an MA in sociology at Saint Louis University, where he researched local demographic trends and land use practices, and a BA in economics at Georgia State University in Atlanta.Daniel J. MontiDaniel J. Monti is Professor of Sociology and the doctoral program in Public and Social Policy at Saint Louis University. He is a graduate of Oberlin College and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. A former Woodrow Wilson Fellow and member of the Missouri State Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, he is the author of over 50 scholarly articles and the author or editor of eight books on subjects ranging from educational reform and youth gangs to urban redevelopment and American urban history. His most recent books include Engaging Strangers (2013), which deals with civic life in contemporary Boston, and Urban People and Places (2014), a survey of cities and urban life in more and less developed societies. He is editor of Polis, a book and monograph series on urban affairs that is published by Fordham University Press.