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Boomtown Columbus: Ohio’s Sunbelt City and How Developers Got Their Way

Boomtown Columbus: Ohio’s Sunbelt City and How Developers Got Their Way

Current price: $29.95
Publication Date: June 5th, 2021
Publisher:
Trillium
ISBN:
9780814257920
Pages:
274

Description

Columbus, Ohio, and its ample cloud cover may be on the eastern edge of the Midwest, but the city’s unfettered suburbanization and rapid postwar expansion recall its Sunbelt peers. To understand why—and the social and economic stakes of this all-too-common model of urban growth—pioneering geographer Kevin R. Cox takes us through the postwar history of development in Columbus, a city that has often welcomed corporate influence at the expense of livability and equal opportunity for its residents.
How have development interests become entwined with government? How has a policy of annexation reformed the city’s map? Why have airline service and major league prestige lagged behind its status as a regional center? And what, if anything, makes this city with a reputation for being average stand apart? In Boomtown Columbus, Cox applies both scholarly expertise and his personal experience as a long-time resident of the city to look at the real-life costs of policy. The resulting narrative will fascinate not only locals but anyone with a stake in understanding American cities and a path toward urban livability for all.
 

About the Author

Kevin R. Cox was Professor of Geography at the Ohio State University for fifty years before his retirement. He is the author of several books, including Making Human Geography and The Politics of Urban and Regional Development and the American Exception.

Praise for Boomtown Columbus: Ohio’s Sunbelt City and How Developers Got Their Way

“The story of Columbus’s development after World War II challenges simple categorizations of “rustbelt” and “sunbelt” cities that have defined post-World War II urban history and adds nuance to the story of deindustrialization. … Boomtown Columbus has opened up a number of avenues for continued exploration of Columbus’s unique history and geography that promise to make important contributions to urban history.” —Tina M. Peabody, H-Net Reviews

“No one knows cities and how they grow better than Kevin Cox, who brings a lifetime of study to bear on the workings of profit, power, and politics in Columbus, Ohio, and the shadowy world that builds the places Americans have to live with.” —Richard Walker, author of Pictures of a Gone City: Tech and the Dark Side of Prosperity in the San Francisco Bay Area

“For anyone interested in the development of modern-day Columbus, Cox’s account will be seen as essential.” —Mansel G. Blackford, author of Columbus, Ohio: Two Centuries of Business and Environmental Change