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
Special Section Introduction
Introduction: Making and Unmaking Neighborhood Boundaries in Postwar U.S. CitiesMarta Gutman
Special Section Articles
“Neighborliness Is Nonspatial”: Howard Thurman and the Search for Integration and Common GroundPeter Eisenstadt
Segregation by Design: Race, Architecture, and the Enclosure of the Atlanta ApartmentMatthew Gordon Lasner
Neighborhood Activism in Planning for New York City, 1945–1975Marci Reaven
Sounding the Powers of Place in Neighborhoods: Responses to the Urban Crisis in Washington Heights and New York CityRobert W. Snyder
Articles
A Sacred Duty: Nationalist and Anti-Imperial Activisms in Buenos Aires, 1916–1930Steven Hyland, Jr.
Arthur Rubloff and the Grinding Politics of Renewal in Chicago, 1947 to 1986Mark Rose and Roger Biles
Who Are the Squatters? Challenging Stereotypes through a Case Study of Squatting in the Dutch City of Leiden, 1970-–1980Bart van der Steen, Charlotte van Rooden, and Merel Snoep
The Housing Struggle in Milan in the 1970s: Influences and ParticularitiesMarco Soresina
Review Essays
The Most Peculiar City in AmericaEmily Lieb
Considering Urban NeighborhoodLisa Krissoff Boehm
Building Authoritarianism in TurkeyElla Fratantuono