Conceptual approaches to service provision in cities throughout history

All cities, from the distant past to the present, provide services for their residents, but the nature and level of urban services vary widely, as do the providers. How are we to understand this variation? We examine the major theoretical and conceptual approaches to urban services, and find that no...

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Veröffentlicht in:Urban studies (Edinburgh, Scotland) Scotland), 2016-06, Vol.53 (8), p.1574-1590
Hauptverfasser: Smith, Michael E, Dennehy, Timothy, Kamp-Whittaker, April, Stanley, Benjamin W, Stark, Barbara L, York, Abigail
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container_end_page 1590
container_issue 8
container_start_page 1574
container_title Urban studies (Edinburgh, Scotland)
container_volume 53
creator Smith, Michael E
Dennehy, Timothy
Kamp-Whittaker, April
Stanley, Benjamin W
Stark, Barbara L
York, Abigail
description All cities, from the distant past to the present, provide services for their residents, but the nature and level of urban services vary widely, as do the providers. How are we to understand this variation? We examine the major theoretical and conceptual approaches to urban services, and find that none is sufficiently comprehensive to explain patterns of service provision in all types of cities: public choice theory, co-production, critical theory, urban political ecology, collective action theory, and social integration. We use two premodern cities – Zanzibar and Tikal – to illustrate the strengths and weaknesses of these theories. A major challenge is to account for both central administrative control of services and more generative, bottom-up service provision.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/0042098015577915
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source SAGE Publications; PAIS Index; JSTOR; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Action theory
Cities
Collective action
Critical theory
Human ecology
Political ecology
Politics
Production
Public choice
Residents
Services
Social integration
Social services
Social services delivery
Urban areas
title Conceptual approaches to service provision in cities throughout history
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