Journal of Urban History (JUH), peer-reviewed and published bi-monthly, provides scholars and professionals with the latest research, analyses, and discussion on the history of cities and urban societies throughout the world. JUH presents original research by distinguished authors from the variety of fields concerned with urban history. Each insightful issue offers the latest scholarship on such topics as public housing, migration, urban growth, and more.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Articles
Living Stones: The House as Actor in Early Modern EuropeDaniel Jütte
The Evolution of an Urban Vision: The Multilevel Pedestrian Networks in Hong Kong, 1965–1997Zheng Tan and Charlie Q. L. Xue
Managing School Integration and White Flight: The Debate over Chicago’s Future in the 1960sTracy L. Steffes
The International Garden City Campaign: Transnational Negotiations on Town Planning Methods 1913–1926Michel Geertse
Navigating by Nose: Fresh Air, Stench Nuisance, and the Urban Environment, 1840–1880Melanie Kiechle
Review Essays
Queers and the CityJulio Capó, Jr.
The Transformation of Jewish Culture in European and American CitiesElana Shapira
Dispatches from the Garden State: Urban Studies Approaches to the History of New JerseyMaia Merin
Recent Trends in Medieval Urban HistoryJoëlle Rollo-Koster
The Limits of Public Health Reform in Urban AmericaDaniel J. Wilson
Stimulating Culture: Coffee and Coffeehouses in Modern European HistoryDaniel Unowsky
Architect, Engineer, and BuilderGail Fenske
Revitalizing, Rethinking, and Shaping the CityEric Paul Mumford