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
Introduction
In Search of the Social: Neighborhood and Community in Urban Planning in Europe and Beyond, 1920–1960 Stefan Couperus and Harm Kaal
Special Section Articles
Building Democracy Anew: Neighborhood Planning and Political Reform in Post-Blitz Rotterdam Stefan Couperus
Mapping and Making Community in the Postwar European City Kenny Cupers
Community Eludes the Architect? German Architect Planners, American Democracy, and the Question of Community Building in Transatlantic Perspective Andreas Joch
In Search of the “Human Scale”: Delimiting the Social in German and Swedish Urban Planning in the 1930s and 1940s David Kuchenbuch
Articles
Planning the Public Functions of Nineteenth-Century Athens: Setting the Priorities between Idealism and Practical Needs Denis Roubien
Fighting Redlining and Gentrification in Washington, D.C.: The Adams-Morgan Organization and Tenant Right to Purchase James M. Lloyd
Cops, Gangs, and Revolutionaries in 1960s Chicago: What Black Police Can Tell Us about Power Beryl Satter
A Small Suburb Becomes a Boomburb: Explaining Suburban Growth in Naperville, Illinois Brian J. Miller
Review Essays
Cities of Socialism: Migration, Mass Housing, and Political Change in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union after World War II Olga Sezneva
Milwaukee Urban History Scholarship: An Engagement with Scale and Scope Andrea M. Truitt
Mapping the Elephant: Toward a Spatial History of the Japanese Empire Tristan R. Grunow