For over thirty years, the Journal of Urban History has provided scholars and professionals with the latest research, analyses, and discussion on the history of cities and urban societies throughout the world.
Contents :
Catherine McNeur - The "swinish multitude" : Controversies over hogs in antebellum New York City
Bülent Batuman - "Early republican Ankara" : Struggle over historical representation and the politics of urban historiography Jeffrey D. Howison - "This is not a cotton picker's dream" : Reapportionment, conservative ideology, and the urban-rural divide Flavia Cristaldi and Joe T. Darden - The impact of immigration policies on transnational Filipino immigrant women : A comparison of their social and spatial incorporation in Rome and Toronto Eric Morser - A hinterland cauldron : Workers, politics, and the remaking of a Midwestern city James Hanlon - Unsightly urban menaces and the rescaling of residential segregation in the United States Shannon King - "Ready to shoot and do shoot" : Black working-class self-defense and community politics in Harlem, New York, during the 1920s Doron Bar and Rehav Rubin - The Jewish Quarter after 1967 : A case study on the creation of an ideological-cultural landscape in Jerusalem's Old City Review essays: Kimberly Sims - Exploring the underground economy in the United States J. Ritchie Garrison - Finding room : Domesticity and deportment in nineteenth-century urban America Scott H. Tang - Indian others and Spanish fantasies : The making and masking of Mexican Los Angeles John Foot - From pure city to mass tourism : Studies of Italian urban space in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries