Universitätsbibliothek
Gulag town, company town : forced labor and its legacy in Vorkuta
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Acknowledgments . . ix
List of Abbreviations and Glossary . . xiv
Map . . xvi
Introduction . . 1
1. From the Margins to the Home Front: Vorkuta as an Outpost . . 15
2. Saving Leningrad, Defining Vorkuta: A Camp and City at War . . 56
3. In Search of "Normalcy": Vorkuta during Postwar Stalinism . . 88
4. Vorkuta in Crisis: Reform and Its Consequences . . 120
5. The "Second Birth" of Vorkuta: Forging the Company Town . . 161
6. From Prisoners to Citizens? Ex-prisoners and the Transformation of Vorkuta . . 198
Epilogue . . 231
Appendix A: Prisoner Data Set . . 251
Appendix B: Non-Prisoner Data Set . . 271
Appendix C: Production Data Set . . 277
Notes . . 279
Index . . 323
Transatlantic romanticism : British and American art and literature, 1790-1860
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Acknowledgments . . vii
Introduction: Capitalism, Nationalism, and the Romantic Weltanschauung . . 1
I THE CITY
1 "The pit of modern art": Practice and Ambition in the London Art World . . 29
2 The Urban Ecology of Art in Antebellum New York . . 29
3 Urban Convalescence in Lamb, Poe, and Baudelaire . . 67
II HISTORY
4 Sublime and Fall: Benjamin West and the Politics of the Sublime in Early Nineteenth-Century Marylebone . . 83
5 Benjamin West's Royal Chapel at Windsor: Who's in Charge, the Patron or the Painter? . . 102
6 The Politics of Style: Allston's and Martin's Belshazzars Compared . . 122
7 James Fenimore Cooper and American Artists in Europe: Art, Religion, Politics . . 144
III LANDSCAPE
8 John Martin, Thomas Cole, and Deep Time . . 171
9 "Gorgeous, but altogether false": Turner, Cole, and Transatlantic Ideas of Decline . . 183
10 Thomas Cole and Transatlantic Romanticism . . 206
IV RACE
11 Picturing the Murder of Jane McCrea: A Critical Moment in Transatlantic Romanticism . . 229
12 The Romantic Indian Commodified: Text and Image in George Catlin's Letters and Notes (1841) . . 259
13 Romantic Racialism and the Antislavery Novels of Stowe, Hildreth, and Melville . . 285
Notes on Contributors . . 311
Index . . 315
Culture, health, and religion at the millennium : Sweden unparadised
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Introduction: How Gloomy Is Sweden at the Millennium? . . 1
1. Hygiene as Metaphor: On Metaphorization, Racial Hygiene, and the Swedish Ideals of Modernity . . 19
2. From Shared Resources to Shared Values . . 51
3. "It's Not about Religion, but about Manipulation": Polemical Discourse against Sects and Cults in Sweden . . 77
4. Something Happened, but What?: On Roy Andersson's Cinematic Critique of the Development of the Welfare State . . 9
5. Sex and Sin in a Multicultural Sweden . . 133
6. Chick Lit as Healing and Self-Help Manual? . . 155
Bibliography . . 183
Notes on Contributors . . 195
Index of Names . . 197
The new American suburb : poverty, race and the economic crisis
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List of Figures . . vii
List of Tables . . xi
Notes on Contributors . . xv
Acknowledgments . . xix
1 Introduction . . 1
SECTION I: SUBURBAN POVERTY
2 The Resurgence of Concentrated Poverty in America: Metropolitan Trends in the 2000s . . 15
3 Debunking the "Cookie-Cutter" Myth for Suburban Places and Suburban Poverty: Analyzing Their Variety and Recent Trends . . 39
SECTION II: RACIAL, ETHNIC, AND NATIVIST CHANGE
4 The Washington, DC Metropolitan Region—Traditional No More? . . 81
5 Local Immigration Legislation in Two Suburbs: An Examination of Immigration Policies in Farmers Branch, Texas, and Carpentersville, Illinois . . 113
SECTION III: SUBURBAN DECLINE—OR NOT?
6 Beyond Sprawl: Social Sustainability and Reinvestment in the Baltimore Suburbs . . 133
7 Metropolitan Growth Patterns and Inner-Ring Suburban Decline: A Longitudinal Analysis of the 100 Largest U.S. Metropolitan Areas . . 153
SECTION IV: SUBURBAN FORECLOSURES
8 Responses to Foreclosure and Abandonment in Cleveland's Inner Suburbs: Three Case Studies . . 177
9 Punctuated Equilibrium: Community Responses to Neoliberalism in Three Suburban Communities in Baltimore County, Maryland . . 187
SECTION V: SUBURBAN POLICY
10 Revitalizing Distressed Older Suburbs: Case Studies in Alabama, Michigan, Ohio, and Pennsylvania . . 213
11 The Response of the Nonprofit Safety Net to Rising Suburban Poverty . . 247
Index . . 285
Starve and immolate : the politics of human weapons
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Acknowledgments . . xi
Abbreviations . . xvii
Introduction - The Death Fast Struggle and the Weaponization of Life . . 1
Chapter 1 Biosovereignty and Necroresistance . . 37
Chapter 2 Crisis of Sovereignty . . 87
Chapter 3 The Biosovereign Assemblage and Its Tactics . . 125
Chapter 4 Prisoners in Revolt . . 163
Chapter 5 Marxism, Martyrdom, Memory . . 223
Chapter 6 Contentions Within Necroresistance . . 271
Conclusion - From Chains to Bodies . . 327
Notes . . 351
Bibliography . . 411
Index . . 459
Inclusion matters : the foundation for shared prosperity
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Foreword . . xv
Acknowledgments . . xix
Abbreviations . . xxii
Overview . . 1
Clarifying Concepts . . 3
Who Gets Excluded and How? . . 5
Inclusion in What and How? . . 8
Enhancing Social Inclusion by Improving Ability, Opportunity, and Dignity . . 13
The Changing Context for Social Inclusion . . 18
Attention to Attitudes and Perceptions Is Important in Addressing Social Inclusion . . 22
Social Inclusion Can Be Achieved . . 25
What Can Policies and Programs Do to Enhance Social Inclusion? . . 26
The Right Question . . 31
Concluding Reflections . . 33
References . . 34
Introduction . . 39
The Issue and the Idea . . 39
What Does This Report Intend to Do? . . 41
Roadmap of the Report . . 43
Notes . . 44
References . . 44
I. FRAMING THE ISSUE
Chapter 1 - What Do We Mean by Social Inclusion? . . 49
Where Does the Usage Come From? . . 49
Contours around an Abstraction . . 50
Social Inclusion Matters for Itself and Because Exclusion Is Too Costly . . 53
Measure What You Value: The Challenge of Quantifying Social Inclusion . . 56
Notes . . 61
References . .61
Chapter 2 - Who Gets Excluded and Why? . . 67
Individuals, Groups, and Their Identities . . 67
How Exclusion Plays Out . . 77
Concluding Reflections . . 85
References . . 86
Chapter 3 - Inclusion in What? Through What Channels? . . 91
What Do Individuals and Groups Take Part In? . . 91
What Influences the Terms on Which Individuals and Groups Take Part in Society? . . 100
Concluding Reflections . . 110
References . . 112
II. TRANSITIONS, TRANSFORMATIONS, AND PERCEPTIONS
Chapter 4 - Transitions, Transformations, and the Changing Context of Inclusion . . 119
Complex Demographic Transitions . . 120
Spatial Transitions . . 132
Economic Transitions . . 138
Not Just Transitions but Revolutions in Knowledge, Information, and Citizen Action . . 146
Concluding Reflections . . 150
Notes . . 151
References . . 152
Chapter 5 - Attitudes and Perceptions of Inclusion . . 157
Subjective Assessments of Individuals and Groups . . 159
Attitudes toward Excluded Groups . . 162
Perceptions of Inequality and Fairness . . 179
Concluding Reflections . . 185
Notes . . 185
References . . 186
III. CHANGE IS POSSIBLE
Chapter 6 - Change toward Social Inclusion . . 193
Change in What? . . 194
The Propellers of Change toward Social Inclusion . . 200
The Importance of Shared Goals and Strong Institutions . . 202
Reflecting on the Trajectory of Change . . 209
References . . 210
Chapter 7 - Propelling Social Inclusion . . 213
Intervening for Social Inclusion through Markets . . 215
Intervening for Social Inclusion through Services . . 219
Intervening for Social Inclusion through Spaces . . 223
Cross-Cutting Approaches Spanning Many Domains . . 229
What Can Social Inclusion Mean in Practice? . . 234
Notes . . 242
References . . 242
Chapter 8 - Concluding Reflections . . 249
What Does This Report Mean for Practitioners of Development? . . 251
References . . 253
Appendix A - Usage of Terms Social Inclusion and Social Exclusion . . 255
References . . 258
Appendix B - Recent Measures of Well-Being . . 261
Appendix C Illustrative Examples of Policies and Programs That Address Social Inclusion . . 267
California dreaming : boosterism, memory, and rural suburbs in the Golden State
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Acknowledgments . . ix
Introduction: Bourgeois Horticulturists in an Agricultural Wonderland . . 1
PART ONE - CALIFORNIA DREAMING . . 19
The Market Revolution and Romanticism . . 20
CHAPTER ONE: The Suburban Ideal . . 25
Boosterism . . 34
CHAPTER TWO: The California Dream . . 38
PART TWO - HARVESTING SUBURBS . . 60
Suburban Definitions, Archetypes, and Limitations . . 62
CHAPTER THREE: The Model Colony of Ontario as the Model Agriburb . . 66
CHAPTER FOUR: The Agriburbs of Sacramento . . 87
Welcome to the Growth Machine . . 112
CHAPTER FIVE: The Boosters . . 117
PART THREE - CULTIVATING MEMORY . . 149
Coming to Terms with Memory . . 152
CHAPTER SIX: The Ongoing Legacies of Boosterism . . 157
CHAPTER SEVEN: Collected Memory and the Continued Legacies of Boosterism . . 182
CONCLUSION: Harvesting Suburbs, Cultivating Memory . . 208
Notes . . 221
Selected Bibliography . . 275
Index . . 301
About the Author . . 306
Istoričeskoe, topografičeskoe i statističeskoe opisanie Voronežskoj gubernii
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Ekonomičeskie transformacii : tradiciâ i rynok (k političeskoj ekonomii perehodnyh obšestv)
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Hresčensem, halăh, Čăvaš naci : voobražaâ i sozdavaâ čuvašskuŭ naciû (problemy istorii čuvašskogo nacionalizma konca XIX-načala XXI veka)
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