Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-8kt4b Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-24T20:41:23.911Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Current bibliography of urban history

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 February 2009

Abstract

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Other
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1987

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

I GENERAL: RESEARCH METHODS, AIDS AND MATERIALS

1 Burns, RI, Society and documentation in crusader Valencia. Princeton: Princeton UP 1985. pp xi + 274.Google Scholar

Statistical publications

2 Marlin, JT et al. , The book of world city rankings. New York Free Press 1986.Google Scholar

Maps and plans

3 Cox, RJ, Trouble on the chain gang: city surveying, maps and the absence of urban planning in Baltimore, 1730–1823: with a checklist of maps of the period. MdHM 81 (1986) 849.Google Scholar

Bibliographies

4 Bloomfield, E, Bibliography: recent publications relating to Canada's urban past. UHR 13 (1984) 121–59.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

Archives

5 Scott, K, New York City court records, 1760–1797: genealogical data from the court of quarter sessions. Washington D.C.: National Genealogical Society, 1983. pp 244.Google Scholar

URBAN HISTORY—DEFINITIONS AND HISTORIOGRAPHY

6 The situation in urban America: a 1983 report on America'ties. Washington D.C.: National Urban Coalition 1983. pp 163.Google Scholar

Urban historiography

7 Grubb, JS, When myths lose power: Four decades of Venetian historiography. JMH 58 (1986) 7392.Google Scholar
8 Higham, J, Herbert Baxter Adams and the study of local history. AHR 90 (1984) 1225–39.Google Scholar
9 Mahoney, TR, Urban history in a regional context: river towns on the upper Mississippi, 1840–1860. JAH 72 (1985) 318–39.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
10 Mcdonald, TJ, The pursuit of urban history: To the rear march. HM 18 (1985) 113–16.Google Scholar

URBANIZATION AND THE GROWTH AND FORTUNES OF TOWNS

11 Armstrong, W, Theatres of accumulation: studies in Asian and Latin American urbanization. Methuen, 1985. ppxvi + 269, il.Google Scholar
12 Bookchin, M. The limits of the city. Montreal: Black Rose Books 1986.Google Scholar
13 Borah, W, Trends in recent studies of colonial Latin American cities. HAHR 64 (1984) 535–54.Google Scholar
14 Brady, TA, Turning Swiss: cities and empire, 1450–1550. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1985. pp xvii + 302.Google Scholar
15 Brown, J, The English market town: as social and economic history 1750–1914. Marlborough: Crowood 1986.Google Scholar
16 Drakahis-Smith, D, Urbanization in the developing world. Croom Helm 1986.Google Scholar
17 Everett, A, Continuity and colonization: the evolution of a Kentish settlement. Leicester: Leicester University Press 1986. pp 440, il.Google Scholar
18 Gappert, G, Cities in the 21st century: a retrospective analysis. Winnipeg: Institute of Urban Studies 1986. pp 14.Google Scholar
19 Goldberg, M & Mercer, J, The myth of the North American city: continentalism challenged. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press 1986. pp 336.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
20 Grant, E ed, Central places, archaeology and history. Sheffield: JR Collins 1986.Google Scholar
21 Hogan, DP & Kertzer, DI, Migration patterns during Italian urbanization, 1865–1921. De 22 (1985) 309–26.Google ScholarPubMed
22 Holton, RJ, Cities, capitalism and civilization. Allen & Unwin 1986.Google Scholar
23 La ville au Canada. CS 19 (1985) 270.Google Scholar
24 Marchant, C, Signs in the city. Hodder & Stoughton 1985.Google Scholar
25 Margolies, L, The development of urban anthropology in Venezuela. CUR 10 (1984) 125–37.Google Scholar
26 Massey, B, Poland in Danzig. GM (1985) 498500.Google Scholar
27 Moch, LP & Tilly, LA, Joining the urban world: occupation, family and migration in three French cities. CSSH 27 (1985) 3356.Google Scholar
28 Momsen, JH, Settlement changes in Alberta: the urbanisation of the countryside: paper prepared for the Annual Conference of the British Association of Canadian Studies. Canada House 1983. pp 12.Google Scholar
29 Morton, HW & Stuart, RC eds, The contemporary Soviet city. Basingstoke: Macmillan 1984.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
30 Myres, JNL, The English settlements. Oxford: Clarendon 1986. pp xxviii + 248, il.Google Scholar
31 Peil, M, African urbanization in comparative perspective. Birmingham: University of Birmingham 1984.Google Scholar
32 Porteous, JD, Beyond the company town: resource frontier settlements in Canada, in Gentilcore, RL, China in Canada: a dialogue on resources and development. Hamilton: McMaster University 1984, 215–23.Google Scholar
33 Pressman, N ed, Reshaping winter cities: concepts, strategies and trends. Palgrave: The Livable Winter City Association 1985. pp 158.Google Scholar
34 Scott, I, Urban and spatial development in Mexico. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press 1982.Google Scholar
35 Simmons, JW, The impact of the public sector on the Canadian urban system, in Stelter, GA & Artibise, AFJ eds, Power and place. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press 1986, 2150.Google Scholar
36 Stelter, GA & Artibise, AFJ eds, Power and place: Canadian Urban development in the North American context. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press 1986. pp 448.Google Scholar
37 Stelter, GA, Power and place in urban history, in Stelter, GA & Artibise, AFJ eds, Power and place. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press 1986, 116.Google Scholar
38 Taylor, JH, Urban autonomy in Canada: its evolution and decline, in Stelter, GA & Artibise, AFJ eds, Power and place. Vancouver: University of British Columbia 1986, 269–91.Google Scholar

Theory of urbanization

39 Artibise, AFJ & Linteau, PA, The evolution of urban Canada: an analysis of approaches and interpretations. Winnipeg: Institute of Urban Studies 1984. pp 35.Google Scholar
40 Barlow, M & Slack, B, International cities: some geographical considerations and a case study of Montreal. Geo 16 (1985) 333–46.Google Scholar
41 Cain, LP, William Dean's theory of Urban growth: Chicago's commerce and industry, 1854–1871. JEcH 45 (1985) 241–50.Google Scholar
42 Cooke, P, The changing urban and regional system in the United Kingdom. ReS 20 (1986) 243–52.Google Scholar
43 Davis, DF, The metropolitan thesis and the writing of Canadian urban history. UHR 14 (1985) 95113.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
44 Gottmann, J, Orbits: the ancient Mediterranean tradition of urban networks. Leopard's Head Press 1984.Google Scholar
45 Harvey, D, The urbanization of capital: studies in the history and theory of capitalist urbanization. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP 1985.Google Scholar
46 Henderson, JV, Economic theory and the cities. (2nd edn). Orlando: Academic Press 1985. pp xii + 274, il.Google Scholar
47 Jacobs, J, Cities and the wealth of nations: principles of economic life. New York: Random House 1984.Google Scholar
48 Kearsley, GW, Urbanisation and development in the third world. NZJG 76 (1984) 1618.Google Scholar
49 Linteau, P & Artibise, FJ, L'évolution de l'urbanisation au Canada: une analyuse des perspectives et des interpretations. Winnipeg: Institut d'études Urbaines 1984. pp 35.Google Scholar
50 Lubell, H, Third world urbanization and international assistance. US 21 (1984) 113.Google Scholar
51 Mandelbaum, SJ, Thinking about cities as systems: Reflections on the history of an idea. JUH 11 (1985) 139–50.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
52 Pred, A, Urban growth and city systems in the US, 1840–1860. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press 1980.Google Scholar
53 Robson, B, Research issues in the changing urban and regional system. ReS 20 (1986) 203–8.Google Scholar

Empirical studies of urbanization and town growth

54 Cadwallader, MT, Analytical urban geography: spatial patterns and theories. Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall 1985.Google Scholar
55 Collins, J, Oppida: earliest towns north of the Alps. Sheffield: Department of Prehistory, University of Sheffield 1984. pp x + 250, il.Google Scholar
56 Gallant, RA, Lost cities. New York: F. Watts 1985.Google Scholar
57 Hausner, V, Changing cities: an introduction to the ESRC Inner Cities Research Programme. ESRC 1985, pp 38, il.Google Scholar
58 Hodder, E ed, Cities of the world: Their origin, progress and present aspect. New York: Garland 1985. [Reprint of 1889 edn]Google Scholar
59 Hohenberg, PM & Lees, LH, The making of urban Europe, 1000–1950. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard UP 1985.Google Scholar
60 Kellerman, A & Krakover, S, Multi-sectoral urban growth in space and time: an empirical approach. ReS 20 (1986) 131–40.Google ScholarPubMed
61 Lineberry, RL, Urban affairs: a look into the past and future. UAQ 21 (1985) 20–4.Google Scholar

Ancient

62 Crosher, J, Ancient cities. Vero Beach, Fla.: Rourke Enterprises 1985.Google Scholar
63 Custer, JF, Delaware prehistoric archaeology: an ecological approach. Newark: University of Delaware Press 1984.Google Scholar
64 Harrison, RK ed, Major cities of the biblical world. Nashville: T. Nelson Pubs 1985.Google Scholar
65 Konvitz, JW, The urban millenium: The city-building process from the early middle ages to the present. Carbondale: Southern Illinois UP 1985. pp xxi + 265, il.Google Scholar
66 Lapidus, IM, Cities and societies: A comparative study of the emergence of urban civilization in Mesopotamia and Greece. JUH 12 (1986) 257–92.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
67 Meeks, WA, The first urban Christians: the social world of the apostle Paul. New Haven: Yale UP 1984.Google Scholar
68 Petersen, RG, The lost cities of Cibola. Phoenix: G & H Books 1985. pp xi + 252, il.Google Scholar
69 Piper, LJ, The Spartan twilight. New Rochelle: A.D. Caratzus 1985.Google Scholar
70 Shahid, I, Rome and the Arabs: a prolegomenon to the study of Byzantium and the Arabs. Washington DC: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection, 1984.Google Scholar
71 Smith, HS & Hall, RM eds, Ancient centres of Egyptian civilisation. Windsor Forest: Kensal Press 1983. pp 100, il.Google Scholar
72 Wells, PS, Farms, villages and cities: commerce and urban origins in late prehistoric Europe. Ithaca: Cornell UP, 1984.Google Scholar
73 Whitehead, D, The demes of Attica, 508–ca. 250 B.C.: a political and social study. Princeton: Princeton UP, 1985.Google Scholar

Medieval and early modern

74 Basu, DK ed, The rise and growth of colonial port cities in Asia. Lanham: University Press of America 1985.Google Scholar
75 Bradley, J, Muzhik and Muscovite: urbanization in late imperial Russia. Berkeley: University of California Press 1985. pp xvi + 422, il.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
76 De Vries, J, European urbanization, 1500–1800. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard UP, 1984. pp xvii + 398, il.Google Scholar
77 Neyrmann, CL, Commerce and culture: the maritime communities of colonial Massachusetts. New York: W. W. Norton 1984. pp 431.Google Scholar
78 Raymond, A, The great Arab cities in the 16th–18th centuries: an introduction. New York: New York UP 1984. pp xv + 155.Google Scholar
79 Tiedemann, JS, Communities in the midst of the American revolution: Queens county, New York, 1774–1775. JSocH 18 (1984) 5778.Google Scholar
80 Whiting, C, Britain under fire: the bombing of Britain's cities, 1940–45. Century 1986. pp 160, il.Google Scholar
81 Wrigley, EA, Urban growth and agricultural change: England and the Continent in the early modern period. JInH 15 (1985) 683728.Google Scholar
82 Yeates, M, The Windsor-Quebec city axis: basic characteristics. JG 83 (1984) 240–9.Google Scholar

Modern

83 Blouin, F, The Boston region, 1810–1850: a study of urbanization. Ann Arbor, MI: UMI Research Press 1978.Google Scholar
84 Dutt, AK, Monroe, CB & Vakamuri, R, Rural urban correlates for Indian Urbanization. GR 76 (1986) 173–82.Google Scholar
85 Fox, K, Metropolitan America: urban life and urban policy in the United States, 1940–1980. Macmillan 1985.Google Scholar
86 Gordon, G ed, Regional cities in the UK, 1890–1980. Harper & Row 1986.Google Scholar
87 Hamm, MF ed, The city in late imperial Russia. Bloomington: Indiana UP 1986.Google Scholar
88 Hudson, JC, Plains country towns. Minneapolis: U of Minnesota P 1985.Google Scholar
89 Larsen, LH, The rise of the urban south. Lexington, KY: UP of Kentucky 1985.Google Scholar
90 Lawless, P & Raban, C ed, The contemporary British city. Harper & Row 1986.Google Scholar
91 Lotchin, RW ed, The martial metropolis: US cities in war and peace, 1900–1970. New York: Praeger 1984.Google Scholar
92 Mohl, RA, The new city: urban America in the industrial age, 1860–1920. Arlington Heights, Ill.: Harlan Davidson, 1985.Google Scholar
93 Noyelle, TJ & Stanback, TM, The economic transformation of American cities. Totowa: Rowman & Allanheld, 1984. pp xx + 295.Google Scholar
94 Peterson, PE ed, The new urban reality. Washington, DC: Brookings Institution 1985. pp 301, il.Google Scholar
95 Rees, G, Cities in crisis: the political economy of urban development in post-war Britain. Edward Arnold 1985.Google Scholar
96 Stevenson, TB, Social change in a Yemeni highlands town. Salt Lake City: Utah UP 1985.Google Scholar
97 Tan, KC, Revitalized small towns in China. GR 76 (1986) 138–48.Google Scholar
98 Thompson, SA, Urbanization and the Middle Rio Grande Conservancy District. GR 76 (1986) 3550.Google Scholar
99 Timberlake, M ed, Urbanization in the world economy. Orlando: Academic Press 1985. pp xv + 387, il.Google Scholar
100 Wood, WB, Intermediate cities on a resource frontier. GR 76 (1986) 149–59.Google Scholar
101 Yeung, Y, Controlling metropolitan growth in Eastern Asia. GR 76 (1986) 125–37.Google Scholar

HISTORY AND FORTUNES OF INDIVIDUAL TOWNS: This section is arranged by the name of the town

102 Browne, GL, Baltimore in the nation, 1789–1861. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press 1980.Google Scholar
103 Chance, NA, China's urban villagers: life in a Beijing commune. New York: Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 1984. pp xix + 165, il.Google Scholar
104 O'connor, TH, Fitzpatrick's Boston, 1846–1866. Boston: Northeastern UP, 1984. pp xvi + 292, il.Google Scholar
105 Grimaldi, L, Only in Bridgeport: an illustrated history of the Park city. Northridge, CA: Windsor Publications 1986.Google Scholar
106 Lapierre, D, The city of Joy [Calcutta]. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday 1985. pp xii + 464.Google Scholar
107 Johns, CM & Potter, TW, The Canterbury late Roman treasure. AeJ 65 (1985) 312–52.Google Scholar
108 Cromie, R, A short history of Chicago. San Francisco: Lexikos 1984. pp 140, il.Google Scholar
109 Lindberg, R, Chicago ragtime: another look at Chicago, 1880–1920. South Bend, Ind: Icarus Press 1985.Google Scholar
110 Mccann, AM et al. , The Roman port and fishery ofCosa: A center of Ancient trade. Princeton: Princeton UP 1985.Google Scholar
111 Ahmed, SU, Dacca: a study in urban history and development. Curzon 1986. pp 288, il.Google Scholar
112 Seib, PM, Dallas: chasing the urban dream. Dallas: Press books 1986. pp xi + 135, il.Google Scholar
113 Irving, D. The destruction of Dresden. Macmillan 1985. pp 255, il.Google Scholar
114 Clack, PAG, The book of Durham city. Buckingham: Barracuda 1985. pp 144. il.Google Scholar
115 Brucker, GA, Florence, The golden age, 1138–1737. New York: Abbeville Press 1984. pp 278, il.Google Scholar
116 Mccomb, DG, Galveston: a history. Austin: University of Texas Press 1986.Google Scholar
117 Deiss, JJ, Herculaneum, Italy's buried treasure. [Rev. edn] New York: Harper & Row 1985. pp 222, il.Google Scholar
118 Shoesmith, R, Hereford city excavations. Council for British Archaeology 1985. pp xii + 102, il.Google Scholar
119 Gillett, E, A history of Hull. Hull: Hull University Press 1985. pp x–428, il.Google Scholar
120 Crooks, JB, Changing face of Jacksonville, Florida, 1900–1910. Fla HQ 62 (1984) 439–63.Google Scholar
121 Gilbert, M, Jerusalem: rebirth of a city. New York: Viking 1985. pp xvii + 238, il.Google Scholar
122 Mandy, N, A city divided: Johannesburg and Soweto. New York: St Martin's Press 1984.Google Scholar
123 Mcdonald, MJ & Wheeler, B, KnoxvilU, Tennessee: continuity and change in an Appalachian city. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press 1984. pp 208.Google Scholar
124 Marshall, JS, The life and times ofLeith. Edinburgh: Donald 1986. pp ix + 204, il.Google Scholar
125 Johnston, A & Den Otter, AA, Lethbridge: a centennial history. Lethbridge: Historical society of Alberta 1984. pp 240.Google Scholar
126 Grant, J, The great metropolis [London]. New York: Garland 1985. [Reprint of 1837 edn].Google Scholar
127 Mack, J, London at War: the making of modern London, 1939–1945. Sidgwick & Jackson 1985. pp 176, il.Google Scholar
128 Manley, L ed, London in the age of Shakespeare. Croom Helm 1986. pp 288, il.Google Scholar
129 Queenan, CF, Long Beach and Los Angeles: a tale of two ports. Northridge, CA: Windsor Publications 1986.Google Scholar
130 Cowan, RG. A backward glance: Los Angeles, 1901–1915. San Bernardino, CA: Burgo Press 1985.Google Scholar
131 Davies, GID, Megiddo. Cambridge: Lutterworth 1986. pp 128, il.Google Scholar
132 Biles, R, Memphis in the Great Depression. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press 1986.Google Scholar
133 Biles, R, The persistence of the past: Memphis in the Great Depression. JSH 12 (1986) 183212.Google Scholar
134 Amos, HE, Cotton city: urban development in antebellum Mobile. University, Alabama: Alabama UP 1985.Google Scholar
135 Bleau, A et al. , Montreal: activities, habitants, quartiers. Montreal: Fides 1984. pp 290.Google Scholar
136 Hamel, P, Mouvements sociaux et transformation des enjeux urbains: le cas de Montreal. CS 19 (1985) 23–8.Google Scholar
137 Higgens, B, The rise and fall of Montreal: a case study of urban growth, regional economic expansion and national development. Moncton 1986.Google Scholar
138 Doyle, DH, Nashville in the new south, 1880–1930. Knoxville: U Tennessee P 1985. pp 360.Google Scholar
139 Stansfield, C, New Jersey: a geography. Boulder: Westview Press 1983. pp 245.Google Scholar
140 Greytak, D, Phares, D & Morley, E, Municipal output and performance in New York City. Lexington: Lexington Press 1975.Google Scholar
141 Hammack, DC, Power and society: Greater New York at the turn of the century. New York: Russel Sage Foundation 1982. pp 326.Google Scholar
142 Latimer, M, Two cities: New York and Brooklyn the year the great bridge opened. New York: The Brooklyn Educational and Cultural Alliance 1983. pp 188.Google Scholar
143 Starr, R, The rise and fall of New York City. New York: Basic Books 1985.Google Scholar
144 Ultan, L & Hermalyn, G, The Bronx in the innocent years, 1890–1925 [New York]. New York: Harper & Row 1985. pp xxviii + 164, il.Google Scholar
145 Brazier, S, Hammond, R & Waterman, SR eds, A new geography of Nottingham. Nottingham: Trent Polytechnic 1984. pp 157, il.Google Scholar
146 Santmyer, HH, Ohio Town. New York: Harper & Row, 1984, pp 309, il.Google Scholar
147 Chester, N, Economics, politics and social studies in Oxford, 1900–1985. Macmillan 1986.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
148 Bracey, D, The book of Peterborough. Buckingham: Barracuda 1985. pp 128, il.Google Scholar
149 Caliguiri, RS, Pittsburgh: renaissance one to the year 2000. UDI 5 (1984) 811.Google Scholar
150 Couvares, FG, The remaking of Pittsburgh: class and culture in an industrializing city, 1877–1919. Albany: The State University of New York Press 1984. pp 187.Google Scholar
151 Mabin, A, The rise and decline of Port Elizabeth, 1850–1900. IJAHS 19 (1986) 275303.Google Scholar
152 Abbott, C, Portland: gateway to the Northwest. Northridge, California: Windsor Publications 1985.Google Scholar
153 Humphrys, G, Prince Rupert reborn. GM (1985) 358–65.Google Scholar
154 Lord, K, Nineteenth century corporate welfare: municipal aid and industrial development in Saint-Jean, Quebec, 1848–1914. UHR 13 (1984) 105–15.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
155 Termote, M & Mongeau, J, L'ampleur de la contre-urbanisation au Quebec. Montreal: INRS-Urbanization 1982.Google Scholar
156 Busson, C, The book ofRamsgate. Buckingham: Barracuda 1985. pp 148, il.Google Scholar
157 Buttino, L & Harem, , The remaking of a city: Rochester, New York, 1964–1984. Dubuque, Iowa: Kendall'Hunt Pub. Co. 1984. pp xxi + 433, il.Google Scholar
158 Mckelvey, B, Rochester, a brief history. New York: Edwin Mellen Press 1984.Google Scholar
159 Alfody, G, The social history of Rome. Totowa, NJ. Barnes & Noble 1985.Google Scholar
160 Needell, JD, Urban reforms of Rio de Janeiro under Pereia Passos. JUH 10 (1984) 383422.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
161 Champoux, H & Nadon, M, Saint-Jerome, en mots et en images. 150 ans de fierté 1834–1984. Saint Jerome: 1984. pp 159.Google Scholar
162 Acheson, TW, Saint John: the making of a Canadian Urban community. Toronto: University of Toronto Press 1985.Google Scholar
163 Bzum, JA, South San Francisco: the making of an industrial city. CHQ 63 (1984) 144–34.Google Scholar
164 Hartman, C, The transformation of San Francisco. Totowa: Rowman & Allan Held 1984. pp 372.Google Scholar
165 Le Baron, G et al. , Santa Rosa: a nineteenth century town. Santa Rosa: Historia, Ltd. 1985. pp 224, il.Google Scholar
166 Whitehead, J, The growth of Stoke Newington. J. Whitehead 1983.Google Scholar
167 Harrison, W, Some aspects of Tenby'story. Tenby: Tenby museum 1985. pp 38, il.Google Scholar
168 Spratt, JS, Thuber, Texas: the life and death of a company coal town. Austin University of Texas Press 1986.Google Scholar
169 O'mara, J, An historical geography of urban system development: Tidewater Virginia in the eighteenth century. Downsview: York University Geographical Monographs 13 1983. pp 320.Google Scholar
170 Popham, P, Tokyo: the city at the end of the world. New York: Harper & Row 1985. pp 191, il.Google Scholar
171 Harney, RF, Toronto: Canada's new cosmopolite. Toronto: The Multicultural History Society of Ontario 1981.Google Scholar
172 Vaughn-Roberson, CA & G, , City in the Osage Hills, Tulsa, Oklahoma. Boulder: Pruett Pub. Co. 1984. pp vii + 196, il.Google Scholar
173 Mcdonald, R & Barman, J eds, Vancouver past: essays in social history. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press 1986. pp 240.Google Scholar
174 Roy, P, A half-century of the writing of Vancouver history, in Mcdonald, RAJ & Barman, J, Vancouver past: essays in social history. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press 1986.Google Scholar
175 Hoffecker, CE, Corporate capital: Wilmington in the twentieth century. Philadelphia: Temple UP 1983. pp viii + 294.Google Scholar
176 Yeate, M, The Windsor—Quebec city axis: basic characteristics. JG 83 (1984) 240–9.Google Scholar
177 Lyon, D & Fenton, R, The development of downtown Winnipeg: historical perspectives on decline and revitalization. Winnipeg: Institute of Urban Studies 1984. pp 210.Google Scholar
178 Smith, PG, Wolverhampton, 985–1985. Wolverhampton 1985.Google Scholar
179 Addyman, PV ed, The archaeology of York. Council for British Archaeology 1986. pp 72, il.Google Scholar
180 Johnson, C, The preservation of Yorkville Village. Downsview, Ontario: York University 1984. pp 33.Google Scholar

PORTRAITS OF TOWNS—LITERARY, GRAPHIC AND STATISTICAL: This section is arranged by the name of the town

181 Braithwaite, L, Exploring Britain's cities. Black 1986. pp 256, il.Google Scholar
182 Fisher, M, Provinces and provincial capitals of the world. Methuen 1986.Google Scholar
183 Gilsenan, M, Imagined cities of the East: an inaugural lecture delivered before the University of Oxford. Oxford: Clarendon 1986. pp 28.Google Scholar
184 Ward, D, Country towns. Readers Digest Association 1984. pp 183, il.Google Scholar

Literary portrayals and personal reminiscences

185 Peters, FE, Jerusalem: The holy city in the eyes of chroniclers, visitors, pilgrims, and prophets from the days of Abraham to the beginnings of modern times. Princeton: Princeton UP 1985.Google Scholar
186 Brandow, JC, A visit to New York and Long Island in 1837: The Journal of Nathaniel TW Carrington. NYH 67 (1986) 2338.Google Scholar
187 Lincoln, CC, My experience in the earthquake and fire in San Francisco. CalH 65 (1986) 3441.Google Scholar
188 Sonnichsen, CL, Tucson: the life and times of an American city. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press 1982.Google Scholar

Photographic portrayals

189 Hales, PB, Silver cities: the photography of American urbanization, 1839–1915. Philadelphia: Temple University Press 1984. pp 315.Google Scholar
190 Muskat, BT, The way it was, 1850–1930: photographs of Montgomery and her Central Alabama neighbors. Montgomery: Landmarks Foundation of Montgomery 1985. pp iv + 181, il.Google Scholar
191 Demchinsky, B, Montreal then and now: the photographic records of a changing city. Montreal: Gazette 1985.Google Scholar
192 Trachtenberg, A, New York in the photographer's eye. JUH 10 (1984) 453–64.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
193 Miller, F, Vogel, MJ & Davis, AF, SHU Philadelphia: a photographic history, 1890–1940. Philadelphia: Temple University Press 1983. pp 290.Google Scholar

Graphic portrayals

194 Carroll, MD, Civic ideology and its subversion: Rembrandt's Oath of Claudius Civilis. Art H 9 (1986) 1235.Google Scholar
195 English, J & Mclaughlin, K, Kitchener: an illustrated history. Waterloo: Wilfrid Laurier University Press 1983. pp 259.Google Scholar

II POPULATION: RESEARCH METHODS, AIDS AND MATERIALS: Research methods

196 Gutmann, MP, Gold from dross?: population reconstruction for the pre-census era. HMN 17 (1984) 519.Google Scholar
197 Salinger, SU & Wetherall, C, Wealth and renting in prerevolutionary Philadelphia. JAH 71 (1985) 826–40.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

Archives

198 Baker, BD, Index to city of Dayton, Ohio deaths, 1873–1881. Dayton: Boat Publishers 1984. pp 101.Google Scholar
199 Davenport, DP, Duration of residence in the 1855 census of New York State. HMN 18 (1985) 512.Google Scholar

Theory

200 Sentance, J, Reconsidering Toronto's emergence as a metropolis: some evidence from the census. UHR 13 (1984) 918.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

GENERAL FEATURES OF URBAN POPULATIONS

201 A computation of the increase of London, and parts adjacent: with some causes thereon. Guernsey: Toucan 1985.Google Scholar
202 Friedlander, D & Moshe, EB, Occupations, migrations, sex ratios, and nuptiality in nineteenth century English communities: A model of relationships. De 23 (1986) 112.Google Scholar
203 Krupat, E, People in cities: the urban environment and its effects. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1985.Google Scholar
204 Meckel, RA, Immigration, mortality, and population growth in Boston, 1840–1880. JInH 15 (1985) 393418.Google ScholarPubMed
205 Obudho, RA, Demography, urbanization and spatial planning in Kenya: a bibliographical survey. Westport: Greenwood 1985.Google Scholar
206 Smithers, J, Determined survivors: community life among the urban elderly. New Brunswick: Rutyers UP 1985.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

NATALITY AND MORTALITY

207 Barker, R, The Hiroshima Maidens. New York: Viking 1985.Google Scholar
208 Friedlander, D & Moshe, EB, Occupations, migration, sex ratios, and nuptuality in nineteenth century English communities: a model of relationships. De 23 (1986) 112.Google Scholar
209 Koppes, CR & Norris, WP, Ethnicity, class and mortality in the industrial city: a case study of typhoid fever in Pittsburgh, 1890–1910. JUH 11 (1985) 259–79.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
210 Liebow, AA, Encounter with disaster: a medical diary of Hiroshima. New York: Norton 1985.Google Scholar
211 Matossian, MK, Death in London, 1705–1909. JInH 16 (1985) 183–98.Google Scholar
212 Srole, C, Beyond one's control: life course and the tragedy of class, Boston, 1880–1900. JFH 11 (1984) 4354.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
213 Storey, R, An estimate of mortality in a pre-Columbian urban population. AAnth 87 (1985) 519–35.Google Scholar

DISEASE

214 Barker, R, The Hiroshima maidens. New York: Viking 1985.Google Scholar
215 Gavin, H, Unhealthiness of London: the habitations of industrial classes. New York: Garland 1985. [Reprint of 1847 edn]Google Scholar
216 Koppes, CR & Norris, WP, Ethnicity, class, and mortality in the industrial city: a case study of typhoid fever in Pittsburgh, 1890–1910. JUH 11 (1985) 259–79.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
217 Rousey, DC, Yellow fever and black policemen in Memphis: a post-reconstruction anomaly. JSH 51 (1985) 357–74.Google ScholarPubMed
218 Slack, P, The impact of plague in Tudor and Stuart England. Routledge & Kegan Paul 1985. pp 416, il.Google Scholar
219 Tonge, N, Cholera and public health. Macmillan Education 1985. pp 48, il.Google Scholar

MEDICINE

220 Greer, AL & S, , Cities and sickness: health care in urban A merica. Beverly Hills: Sage Publications 1983. pp 304.Google Scholar
221 Liebow, AA, Encounter with disaster: a medical diary of Hiroshima. New York: Norton 1985.Google Scholar

MIGRATION

222 Blanc, B, Developpement de nouvelles zones d'accueil pour l'immigrant à Montreal: le cas de la Côte des Neiges. CS 19 (1985) 1722.Google Scholar
223 Fawcett, JT, Khoo, SE & Smith, PC eds, Women in the cities of Asia: migration and urban adaptation. Epping: Bowker 1984. pp xviii + 406.Google Scholar
224 Fitch, N, Les petits parisiens en province: the silent revolution in the Allier, 1860–1900. JFH 11 (1986) 131–55.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
225 Fuller, TD, Lightfoot, P & Peeasit, K, Rural-urban mobility in Thailand: a decision-making approach. De 22 (1985) 565–79.Google ScholarPubMed
226 Grubb, F, The market for indentured immigrants: evidence on the efficiency of forward labour contracting in Philadelphia, 1745–1773. JEcH 45 (1985) 855–68.Google Scholar
227 Hogan, DP & Kertzer, DI, Migration patterns during Italian urbanization, 1865–1921. De 22 (1985) 309–26.Google ScholarPubMed
228 Lacey, L, Interurban flows of population and occupational skills to three cities in Nigeria. IMR 19 (1985) 686707.Google ScholarPubMed
229 Miller, F, Black migration to Philadelphia: a 1924 profile. PenMHB 108 (1984) 315–50.Google Scholar
230 Shaw, RP, Intermetropolitan migration in Canada: changing determinants over three decades. Toronto: NC Press 1985.Google Scholar
231 Zucchi, J, The Italian immigrants of St John's ward, 1875–1915. Toronto: The Multi Cultural History Society of Ontario 1981.Google Scholar

POPULATION MOVEMENTS WITHIN TOWNS

232 Edmonston, B, Metropolitan population deconcentration in Canada, 1941–1976. CSP 10 (1983) 4970.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
233 Hedges, B, Migration and the inner city. DOE 1983. pp ii + 76, il.Google Scholar
234 Kuz, TJ, How long do people stay in a single resource community: a study of Thompson, Manitoba. Winnipeg: Institute of Urban Studies 1984. pp 36.Google Scholar
235 Schenk, H, Residential immobility in urban India. GR 76 (1986) 184–95.Google Scholar
236 Smith, N & Williams, P eds, Gentrification of the city. Boston: Allen & Unwin 1986. pp 256, il.Google Scholar
237 Thach, QT, Classe sociale et mobilité résidentielle: les cas des irlandais à Montréal de 1851 à 1871. Montreal: McGill University 1985. pp 30.Google Scholar

FAMILY AND HOUSEHOLD STRUCTURE

238 Anderson, M, Continuity and turmoil in industrial cities. JFH 10 (1985) 196205.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
239 Dynarski, M, Household formation and suburbanization, 1970–1980. JUE 19 (1986) 7187.Google ScholarPubMed
240 Janssens, A, Industrialization without family change? The extended family and the life cycle in a Dutch industrial town, 1880–1920. [Tilburg] JFH 11 (1986) 2542.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
241 Kuz, TJ, Winnipeg population: structure and process, 1951–81. Winnipeg: Institute of Urban Studies 1984. pp 69.Google Scholar
242 Nicholas, D, The domestic life of a medical city: women, children and family in fourteenth century Ghent. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press 1985.Google Scholar
243 Peel, M, On the margins: lodgers and bankers in Boston [Massachusetts], 1860–1900. JAH 72 (1985) 813–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
244 Rawson, B ed The family in ancient Rome new perspectives. Ithaca: Cornell UP 1986.Google Scholar
245 Weiler, NS, Family security or social security? The family and the elderly in New York state during the 1920s. JFH 11 (1986) 7796.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

III PHYSICAL STRUCTURE: PHYSICAL AND STRUCTURAL CHARACTERISTICS OF TOWNS: General

246 Spelt, J, Toronto: the evolution of an urban landscape. JG 83 (1984) 250–5.Google Scholar

Medieval and early modern

247 Tatton-Brown, T, The topography of Anglo-Saxon London. A 228 (1986) 21–8.Google Scholar

Modern

248 Brayshaw, D, Hamburg: urban opportunities. AR 1069 (1986).Google Scholar
249 Casper, DE, Urban environment of Latin America: recent writings, 1977–1983. Monticello: Vance Bibliographies 1984.Google Scholar
250 Pack, JR, Urban spatial transformation: Philadelphia 1850 to 1880, heterogeneity to homogeneity? SSH 8 (1984) 425–54.Google Scholar
251 Rosen, CM, Infrastructural improvement in nineteenth century cities: A conceptual framework and cases. JUH 12 (1986) 211–56.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
252 Taylor, HL, Spatial organization and the residential experience: black Cincinnati in 1850. SSH 10 (1986) 4570.Google Scholar

PHYSICAL AND STRUCTURAL CHARACTERISTICS OF AREAS WITHIN TOWNS

253 Orser, WE, The making of a Baltimore Community: the Edmondson Avenue area, 1915–1945. MdHM 80 (1985) 203–27.Google Scholar

Slums

254 Haugh, C, Coping strategies and street life: the ethnography of Winnipeg's skid row. Winnipeg: Institute of urban studies 1985. pp 120.Google Scholar
255 Pirie, GH & Hart, DM, The transformation of Johannesburg'ack western areas. JUH 11 (1985) 387410.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
256 Rose, HM ed, Geography of the ghetto: perceptions problems and alternatives. DeKalb: Northern Illinois University Press 1972. pp 273.Google Scholar
257 Tunbridge, JE, Clarance Street, Ottawa: contemporary change in an inner city, zone of discard. UHR 14 (1986) 247–57.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

Suburbs

258 Binford, HC, The first suburbs: residential communities on the Boston periphery, 1815–1860. Chicago: U Chicago P 1985. pp 320.Google Scholar
259 Edmonston, B & Guterbock, TM, Is suburbanization slowing down? Recent trends in population deconcentration in US metropolitan areas. SF 62 (1984) 905–25.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
260 Hellman, L, Routes in Cheshire [Washington]. AR 1064 (1985) 4652.Google Scholar
261 Logan, K, Haciendo Pueblo: the development of a Guadalajuran suburb. Alabama: The University of Alabama Press 1984. pp 141.Google Scholar
262 Lyon, D, Development of the urban-rural fringe: a literature review. Winnipeg: Institute of Urban Studies 1983. pp 57.Google Scholar
263 Maccormac, R, Suburban syntax. AR 1064 (1985) 53–4.Google Scholar
264 Mccarthy, M, The politics of suburban growth: a comparative approach, in Stelter, GA & Artibise, AFT, Power and Place. Vancouver: University of Bristol Columbia Press 1986, 323–40.Google Scholar
265 Norcliffe, G, From rural village to industrial suburb: a guide to a field trip examining the impact of metropolitan Toronto on Maple, Ontario. Downsview: York University 1984. pp 46.Google Scholar
266 Rothblatt, DN, Suburbia: an international assessment. Croom Helm 1986.Google Scholar
267 Stahura, JM, Suburban development, Black suburbanization and the Civil Rights Movement since World War II. ASR 51 (1986) 131–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
268 Sussman, LJ, The suburbanization of American Judaism as reflected in Synagogue building and architecture, 1945–1975. AJH 75 (1985) 4860.Google Scholar
269 Trowell, F, Speculative housing developments in the suburb of Headingley, Leeds, 1838–1914. TSP 129 (1983).Google Scholar

Open space

270 Cranz, G, The politics of park design: a history ofurbanparks in America. Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press 1982. pp 347.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
271 Delgado, JP, A dream of seven decades: San Francisco's Aquatic Park. CalH 64 (1985) 264–71.Google Scholar
272 Forshaw, A, The open space of London. Alison & Busby 1986. pp 192, il.Google Scholar

SITES AND BUILDINGS

273 Dawson, AD, Land use planning and the law. New York: Garland STPM Press 1982. pp 246.Google Scholar
274 Melnyk, BP, Calgary Guilds: the emergence of an urban landscape, 1905–1914. Regina: University of Regina 1985.Google Scholar

Land ownership and estate organization

275 Gilpin, J, The land development process in Edmonton, Alberta, 1881–1917, in Stelter, GA & Artibise, AFJ, Power and place. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press 1986, 151–72.Google Scholar

Land values

276 Evans, AW & Beed, C, Transport costs and urban property values in the 1970s. US 23 (1986) 105–18.Google Scholar
277 Mercer, J & Goldberg, M, Value differences and their meaning for urban development in Canada and the US, in Stelter, GA & Artibise, AFJ Power and place. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press 1986, 343–94.Google Scholar

Building industry

278 Buggey, S, An entrepreneur in the Halifax building world: the role of John D Nash, in Stelter, GA & Artibise, AFJ, Power and place. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press 1986, 173–86.Google Scholar
279 Wade, J, Wartime housing limited, 1941–1947: Canadian housing policy at the crossroads. UHR 15 (1986) 4159.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

Architecture

280 Aldrich, M, Gothic architecture illustrated: the drawings of Thomas Rickman in New York. AeJ 65 (1985) 427–33.Google Scholar
281 Elmore, JW ed, A guide to the architecture of Metro Phoenix. Phoenix: Phoenix Magazine Publishing Inc 1983. pp 200.Google Scholar
282 Feaver, J, Seventeenth century survivors: pre-1700 buildings in the five county Philadelphia area. St Davis: Colonial Society of Pennsylvania 1982. pp 52.Google Scholar
283 George, E, Inventing urban variety [London]. AR 1069 (1986) 83–9.Google Scholar
284 Lambert, P, Land tenure and concepts of architecture and the city: Milton Park in Montreal, in Stelter, GA & Artibise, AFJ, Power and Place, Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press 1986. pp 133–50.Google Scholar
285 Moore, CW, The city observed, Los Angeles: a guide to its architecture and landscapes. New York: Random House, 1984, il.Google Scholar
286 Spence, R, Sensual Sydney. AR 1066 (1985) 2640.Google Scholar
287 Stern, RAM, Gilmartin, G & Massengale, J, New York, 1900: architecture and urbanism, 1890–1915. New York: Rizzoil 1984. pp 520.Google Scholar
288 Tausky, NZ & Distefano, LD, Victorian architecture in London and south western Ontario: symbols of aspiration. Toronto: University of Toronto Press 1986. pp 416.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

Commercial and industrial building development

289 Lurcott, RH & Branca, ST, Pittsburgh: Economic reclamation of riverfronte. UDI 5 (1984) 1619.Google Scholar

HOUSING

290 Androsz, GD, Housing and Urban development in the USSR. Albany: SUNY Press 1985.Google Scholar
291 Bacher, JC, Canadian housing policy in perspective. UHR 15 (1986) 318.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
292 Bosch, T, Bosch boogjes, AR 1064 (1985) 2631.Google Scholar
293 Correa, C, Correa courts. AR 1064 (1985) 32–5.Google Scholar
294 Harris, R, Housing in Canadian cities, an agenda and review of sources. UHR 14 (1986) 259–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
295 Mallach, A, Inclusionary housing programs: policies and practices. Piscataway: Centre for Urban Policy Research 1984. pp 288.Google Scholar
296 Maurios, G, Drancy focus [Paris]. AR 1064 (1985) 36–9.Google Scholar
297 Thomas, A, Housing and urban renewal: residential decay and revitalization in the private sector. Allen & Unwin 1986.Google Scholar

House building

298 Burchell, RW et al. , Mount Laurel II: challenge and delivery of low cost housing. Piscataway: Centre for Urban Policy Research 1983. pp 440.Google Scholar
299 Hudson, JR, Soho: a study of residential invasion of a commercial and industrial area. UAQ 20 (1984) 4663.Google Scholar
300 Hulchanski, JD, The ‘1935 Dominion Housing Act’: setting the stage for a permanent federal presence in Canada'using Sector. UHR 15 (1986) 1940.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
301 Hurl, LF, The Toronto Housing Company, 1912–1923: the pitfalls of painless philanthropy. CHR 65 (1984) 2853.Google Scholar
302 Sternlieb, G et al. , America's housing: prospects and problems. Piscataway: Centre for Urban Policy Research 1980. pp 576.Google Scholar

House types

303 Hopkins, E, Working class housing in Birmingham during the industrial revolution. IRSH 31 (1986) 8094.Google Scholar
304 Pope, L, Vancouver's floating homes. CanGeog 104 (1984) 4651.Google Scholar

House ownership

305 Buchanan, P, Housing, a possible public realm? AR 1064 (1985) 23–5.Google Scholar
306 Dawson, D ed, The cheaper end of the owner occupied housing market: an analysis for the City of Glasgow, 1971–77. Edinburgh: Scottish Economic Planning Department 1982.Google Scholar
307 Evel, M, Sclar, E & Luria, D eds, Shaky palaces: home ownership and social mobility in Boston, 1870–1970. New York: Columbia UP 1984. pp xxiv + 459.Google Scholar
308 Hertzog, S, A city of tenants: home ownership and social class in Montreal, 1847–1881. Montreal: McGill University 1985. pp 59.Google Scholar
309 Lake, RW, The new suburbanites: race and housing. Piscataway: Centre for Urban Policy Research 1981. pp 320.Google Scholar
310 Logan, WS, The gentrification of inner Melbourne: a political geography of inner city housing. St Lucia: University of Queensland Press 1985.Google Scholar
311 Macdonald, A, The Weller way [Liverpool]. Faber 1986.Google Scholar
312 Rich, JM, Municipal boundaries in a discriminatory housing market: an example of racial leap frogging. US 21 (1984) 3140.Google Scholar

Housing conditions

313 Couch, C, Housing conditions in Britain and West Germany. Anglo German Foundation for the study of Industrial Society 1985.Google Scholar
314 Gavin, H, Unhealthiness of London: the habitations of industrial classes. New York: Garland 1985. [Reprint of 1847 edn].Google Scholar
315 Hole, J, The homes of the working classes: with suggestions for their improvement. New York: Garland 1985.Google Scholar
316 Shapiro, AL, Housing the poor ofParis, 1850–1902. Madison: Wisconsin UP 1985. pp 224, il.Google Scholar
317 Struyk, RJ, Upgrading existing dwellings: an element in the housing strategies of developing countries. JDA 17 (1982) 6776.Google Scholar
318 Thomas, RH, Black suburbanization and housing quality in Atlanta. JUA 6 (1984) 1728.Google Scholar

House rents

319 Chambers, EJ, A new measure of the rental cost of housing in the Toronto market, 1890–1914. HS/SH 17 (1984) 165–74.Google Scholar
320 Stegman, MA, Rent control: the demographics of rental housing in New York city. Piscataway 1982. pp 271.Google Scholar

ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS

321 Achour, D & Divay, G, Les coûts d'habitat: un entère d'urbanisme. Sillery: INRS-Urbanisation 1985. pp 272.Google Scholar
322 Beier, AL & Finlay, R eds, London 1500–1700: the making of the metropolis. Longman 1986. pp x + 283, il.Google Scholar
323 Lauritzen, P, Venice preserved. Joseph 1986.Google Scholar

IV SOCIAL STRUCTURE: RESEARCH METHODS, AIDS AND MATERIALS: Archives

324 Epstein, S, Wills and wealth in medieval Genoa, 1150–1250. Cambridge: Harvard UP 1985.Google Scholar

Printed documentary sources

325 1851 surname index of Manchester. Manchester: The Society 1984. pp iv + 59, il.Google Scholar

Theory

326 Hayden, D, Redesigning the American dream: the future of housing, work, and family life. Washington DC: Planner's network 1984.Google Scholar
327 Smith, TM, Becoming a good and competent community, in Porter, PR & Sweet, DC, Rebuilding America's cities: roads to recovery. New Brunswick: Centre for Urban Policy Research 1984, 123–42.Google Scholar

SOCIAL STRUCTURE AND CHARACTERISTICS OF TOWNS: General

328 Ward, P, Japanese capitals: a cultural, historical and artistic guide to Nara, Kyoto and Tokyo, successive capitals of Japan. Cambridge: Orleander 1985. pp ix + 220, il.Google Scholar

Ancient

329 Deagan, K, Spanish St Augustine: the archaeology of a colonial creole community. New York: Academic Press 1983. pp 317.Google Scholar

Modern

330 Collin, JP, Spécialisation sociale de l'espace et autonomie municipale dans la banlieue montréalaise, 1875–1920. UHR 13 (1980) 1934.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
331 Doucet, M & Weaver, JC, Town fathers and urban community: the roots of community power and physical form in Hamilton, Upper Canada in the 1830s. UHR 13 (1984) 7590.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
332 Johnson, M, Surveying service users in multi-racial areas: the methodology of the Urban Institutions Project. Birmingham: SSRC 1984. pp 48.Google Scholar
333 Lee, BA et al. , Testing the decline of community thesis: neighbourhood organisations in Seattle, 1929 and 1979. AJS 89 (1984) 1161–88.Google Scholar
334 White, J, The worst street in North London: a social history of Campbell Bank, Islington, between the wars. Routledge & Kegan Paul 1986.Google Scholar

SOCIAL STRUCTURE AND CHARACTERISTICS OF AREAS WITHIN TOWNS

335 Andrew, C, Leveillee, J & Quesnel, L, Le pouvoir local et les strategies de realignement dans les centres urbains du Quebec. AnthS 9 (1985) 117–50.Google Scholar
336 Barman, J, Neighbourhood and community in interwar Vancouver: residential differentiation and civic voting behaviour, in Mcdonald, RAJ & Barman, J, Vancouver past: essays in social history. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press 1986.Google Scholar
337 Bjorklund, EM, The danwei: socio-spatial characteristics of work units in China's urban society. EcG 62 (1986) 1629.Google Scholar
338 Gill, A, A village within a city: the Hessle Road fishing community of Hull. Hull: Hull University Press 1986. pp 66, il.Google Scholar
339 Johnston, RJ, Residential segregation, the state and constitutional conflict in American urban areas. Academic 1984. pp vii + 203, il.Google Scholar
340 Langlois, A, Un nouveau cadre méthodologique pour l'étude de la ségrégation résidentielle appliquée a Montréal, 1931–71. CanGeog 29 (1985) 194206.Google Scholar

Central business district

341 Thornbury, W, Old Fleet Street [London]. Alderman 1986. pp 192, il.Google Scholar

Slums

342 Charmock, A, Slum dwellers, unite [Bombay]. GM (1985) 560–63.Google Scholar

Middle-class areas

343 Garmey, S, Gramercy Park, an illustrated history of a New York neighborhood. New York: Balsam Press, 1984 pp 192, il.Google Scholar

Suburbs

344 Rothblatt, DN, Suburbia: an international assessment. Croom Helm 1986.Google Scholar
345 Tipple, AG, Self help suburb [Kumasi]. GM (1985) 466–7.Google Scholar

Open spaces

346 Cranz, G, The politics of park design: a history of urban parks in America. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press 1982. pp 347.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
347 Forshaw, A, The open space of London. Allison & Busby 1986. pp 192, il.Google Scholar

SOCIAL ORGANIZATIONS, CLUBS AND SOCIETIES

348 Herman, G, Ritualized friendship and the Greek city. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1986. pp 220, il.Google Scholar
349 Humfrey, P & Mackenney, R, The Venetian trade guilds as patrons of art in the renaissance. BurM 998 (1986) 317–30.Google Scholar
350 Williams, MR, Neighborhood organizations: seeds of a new urban life. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press 1985.Google Scholar

CLASS STRUCTURE, PROTESTS AND DISORDERS: Occupational structure

351 Amelang, JS, Barristers and judges in early modern Barcelona: the rise of a legal elite. AHR 90 (1984) 1264–84.Google Scholar
352 Cassis, Y, Bankers in English society in the late nineteenth century. EHR 2 (1985) 210–29.Google Scholar
353 Lewis, RD, The segregated city class and occupation in Montreal, 1861–1901. Montreal: McGill University 1985.Google Scholar

Class composition and interaction

354 Barrett, JR, Unity and fragmentation: class, race and ethnicity on Chicago's south side 1900–1922. JSocH 18 (1984) 3756.Google Scholar
355 Berlanstein, LR, The working people of Paris, 1871–1914. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 1985.Google Scholar
356 Blackmar, B, Class conflict in Canadian cities. JUH 10 (1984) 211–22.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
357 Blumin, SM, The hypothesis of middle-class formation in nineteenth-century America: a critique and some proposals. AHR 90 (1985) 299338.Google Scholar
358 Clawson, MA, Fraternal orders and class formation in the nineteenth century United States. CSSH 27 (1985) 672–95.Google Scholar
359 Conlon, FF, Caste, community, and colonialism: the elements of population recruitment and urban rule in British Bombay, 1665–1830. JUH 11 (1985) 181208.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
360 Couvares, FG, The remaking of Pittsburgh: Class and culture in an industrializing city 1877–1919. Albany: State University of New York Press 1984.Google Scholar
361 Dickson, T & Clarke, T, Social concern and social control in nineteenth century Scotland: Paisley 1841–1843. SHR 65 (1986) 4860.Google Scholar
362 Edel, M, Sclar, E & Luria, D eds, Shaky palaces: home ownership and social mobility in Boston, 1870–1970. New York: Columbia UP 1984. pp xxiv + 459.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
363 Epstein, S. Wills and wealth in medieval Genoa, 1150–1250. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard UP 1985.Google Scholar
364 Folbre, NR, The wealth of patriarchs: Deerfield, Massachusetts, 1760–1840. JInH 16 (1985) 199220.Google Scholar
365 Gilkeson, JS, Middle class Providence, 1820–1840. Princeton: Princeton UP 1986.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
366 Mandel, D, The Petrograd workers and the fall of the old regime: from the February revolution to the July days, 1917. New York: St Martin's Press 1983. pp xii + 210, il.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
367 Mandel, D, The Petrograd workers and the Soviet seizure of power: from the July days 1917 to July 1918. New York: St Martin's Press 1984. pp xv + 211.Google Scholar
368 Mann, K, Marrying well: marriage, status and social change among the educated elite in colonial Lagos. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1985.Google Scholar
369 Mcdonald, RAJ, Working class Vancouver, 1886–1914: urbanism and class in British Columbia, in McDonald, RAJ & Barman, J, Vancouver Past: essays in social history. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press 1986.Google Scholar
370 Norberg, K, Rich andpoor in Grenoble, 1600–1814. Berkeley: University of California Press 1985. pp 366, il.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
371 Phillips, A, Ten men and Colchester: public good and private profit in a Victorian town. Chelmsford: Essex Record Office 1985.Google Scholar
372 Rosensweig, R, Eight hours for what we will: workers and leisure in an industrial city, 1870–1920. New York: Cambridge UP 1983. pp xi + 304.Google Scholar
373 Salinger, SV & Wetherall, C, Wealth and renting in prerevolutionary Philadelphia. JAH 71 (1985) 826–40.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
374 Steffen, CG, The mechanics of Baltimore: workers and politics in the age of Revolution. Urbana: U Illinois P 1984. pp xv + 296.Google Scholar
375 Wilentz, S, Chants democratic: New York City and the rise of the American working class, 1788–1850. New York: Oxford UP 1984. pp 446.Google Scholar
376 Wilson, NC, The making of Victorian Ipswich: middle class leadership in a nineteenth century town. SuLHRN 3 (1984) 1520.Google Scholar

Social and class attitudes

377 Errington, J, Friends and foes: the Kingston elite and the war of 1812—a case study in ambivalence. JCanS 20 (1985) 5879.Google Scholar
378 Kann, ME, Middle class radicalism in Santa Monica. Philadelphia: Temple UP 1986.Google Scholar

Protests and disorders

379 Avrich, P, The Haymarket tragedy. Princeton: Princeton UP 1984.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
380 Borgos, S, The ACORN squatters'paign. SPA 15 (1984) 1726.Google Scholar
381 Carroll, LL, Carnival rites as vehicles of protest in Renaissance Venice. SCJ 16 (1985) 487502.Google Scholar
382 Davis, SG, The career of colonel Pluck: folk drama and popular protest in early nineteenth-century Philadelphia. PenMHB 109 (1985) 179202.Google Scholar
383 Diefendorf, B, Prologue to a massacre: popular unrest in Paris, 1557–1572. AHR 90 (1985) 1067–91.Google Scholar
384 Eyre, LA, Political violence and urban geography in Kingston, Jamaica. GR 74 (1984) 2437.Google Scholar
385 Gilje, PA, ‘Le menu people’ in America: Identifying the mob in the Baltimore Riots of 1812. MdHM 81 (1986) 5066.Google Scholar
386 Harrison, M, The ordering of the urban environment time, work and the occurrence of crowds 1790–1835. PaP 110 (1986) 134–68.Google Scholar
387 Johnson, C ed, The city in conflict. Mansell 1985.Google Scholar
388 Lane, R, Routs of violence in black Philadelphia, 1860–1900. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard UP 1986. pp 213, il.Google Scholar
389 Lyons, WE & Lowery, D, The organisation of political space and citizen responses to dissatisfaction in urban communities: an integrative model. JP 48 (1986) 321–46.Google Scholar
390 Pierson, RL, Riots Chicago style. Great Neck, NY: Todd & Honeywell 1984. pp 116, il.Google Scholar
391 Porter, BD, The Miami riot of 1980: crossing the bounds. Lexington: LexingtonBooks 1984. pp xiv + 206, il.Google Scholar
392 Szuchman, MD, Disorder and Social control in Buenos Aires, 1810–1860. JInH 15 (1984) 83110.Google Scholar
393 Traugoth, M, Armies of the poor: determinants of working class participation in the Parisian insurrection of June 1848 [Paris]. Princetown: Princetown University Press 1985. pp xix + 293, il.Google Scholar
394 Waller, AL, Community, class and race in the Memphis riot of 1866. JSocH 18 (1984) 233–46.Google Scholar

SOCIAL LIFE: Social life, customs and traditions

395 Cahill, N, The treasury of Persepolis: Gift-giving at the city of the Persians. AJA 89 (1985) 373–89.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
396 Carroll, LL, Carnival rites as vehicles of protest in Renaissance Venice. SCJ 16 (1985) 487502.Google Scholar
397 Friedman, AT, Patronage and the production of tombs in London and the provinces: the Willoughby monument of 1591. AeJ 65 (1985) 390401.Google Scholar
398 Gilkeson, JS, The rise and decline of the ‘Puritan Sunday’ in Providence, Rhode Island, 1810–1826. NEQ 14 (1986) 7591.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
399 Meagher, TJ, ‘Why should we care for a little trouble or a walk through the mud’: St Patrick's and Columbus Day parades in Worcester, Massachusetts, 1845–1915. NEQ 58 (1985) 526.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
400 Nasaw, D, Children of the city: at work and play. Garden City, NY: Anchor/Double-day 1985. pp 244.Google Scholar
401 Paterson, A, Across the bridges: life by the south London riverside. Garland 1980. pp xiv + 273.Google Scholar
402 Pease, WH & Pease, JH, The web of progress: private values and public styles in Boston and Charleston, 1828–1843. New York: Oxford UP 1985. pp 336.Google Scholar
403 Robertson, N, A point of precedence at Platala: the dispute between Athens and Sparta over leading the procession. HES 55 (1986) 88102.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
404 Ruggiero, G, The boundaries of Eros: sex crime and sexuality in renaissance Venice. New York: Oxford UP 1985. pp 352.Google Scholar

Religious activity

405 Abray, LJ, The people's Reformation: magistrates, clergy and commons in Strasbourg, 1500–1598. Oxford: Blackwell 1985.Google Scholar
406 Andrews, D, The African methodists of Philadelphia, 1794–1802. PenMHB 108 (1984) 471–86.Google Scholar
407 Benko, S, Pagan Rome and the early christians. Batsford 1985.Google Scholar
408 Farr, JR, Popular religious solidarity in sixteenth-century Dijon. FHS 14 (1985) 192214.Google Scholar
409 Gallagher, T, Protestant extremism in urban Scotland, 1930–1939: its growth and contraction. SHR 64 (1985) 143–67.Google Scholar
410 Grossman, L, The boundaries of the city: a nineteenth century essay on the limits of historical knowledge. HTh 25 (1986) 3351.Google Scholar
411 Gough, A, Paris and Rome: the Gallican church and the Ultra montaine campaign, 1848–53. Oxford: Clarendon 1986.Google Scholar
412 Handlin, L, Dissent in a small community [New Haven]. NEQ 58 (1985) 193220.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
413 Harper, GW, Clericalism and revival: the Great Awakening in Boston as a pastoral phenomenon. NEQ 47 (1984) 554–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
414 Hoffman, PT, Church and community in the Diocese of Lyon, 1500–1789. New Haven: Yale UP 1984.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
415 Meeks, WA, The first urban Christians: the social world of the apostle Paul. New Haven: Yale UP 1984.Google Scholar
416 Meyer, JP, La Rochelle and the failure of the French reformation. SCJ 15 (1984) 169–83.Google Scholar
417 Munck, R, Class and religion in Belfast: a historical perspective. JCH 20 (1985) 241–60.Google Scholar
418 Williams, PW, German American Catholicism in Cincinnati. CinHSB 42 (1984) 2330.Google Scholar

Recreation

419 Brundage, D, The producing classes and the saloon: Denver in the 1880s. LabH 26 (1985) 2952.Google Scholar
420 Magnusson, L, Drinking and the Verlery System 1820–1850: the significance of taverns and drink in Eskilstuna before industrialization. SEcHR 34 (1986) 119.Google Scholar
421 Noel, TS, The city and the saloon: Denver, 1858–1916. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press 1982. pp 131.Google Scholar
422 Rosensweig, R. Eight hours for what we will: workers and leisure in an industrial city, 1870–1920. New York: Cambridge UP 1983. pp xi + 304.Google Scholar
423 Russell, CEB, Manchester boys: sketches of Manchester lads at work and play. Manchester: N. Richardson 1984. pp 44, il.Google Scholar

Holidays and resorts

424 Forster, P, The baths of Bursa. GM (1985) 657–9.Google Scholar
425 Garland, GG & Kruger, D, Durban's beach reclaimed. GM (1985) 608–11.Google Scholar
426 Walton, JK, The seaside resort. Hist 7 (1985) 1621.Google Scholar

SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND DEVIANCE: Delinquency

427 Burford, EJ, Wits, wenches and wantons: London's low life: Covent garden in the eighteenth century. Hale 1986. pp 224, il.Google Scholar
428 Donovan, JM, The uprooting theory of crime and the Corsicans of Manseille 1825–80. FHS 13 (1984) 500–28.Google Scholar
429 Harsin, J, Policing prostitution in nineteenth-century Paris. Princeton: Princeton UP 1985.Google Scholar
430 Ruggiero, G, The boundaries of Eros: sex crime and sexuality in renaissance Venice. New York: Oxford UP 1985. pp 352.Google Scholar
431 Senkewicz, RM, Vigilantes in gold rush San Francisco. Stanford: Stanford UP 1985.Google Scholar
432 Swift, RE, Another Stafford street row: law, order and the Irish presence in midVictorian Wolverhampton. IMin 111 (1984).Google Scholar
433 Young, J, Crime in the inner city. Aldershot: Wildwood 1986.Google Scholar

Poverty and poor relief

434 Bosanquet, CBP, London: some accounts of its growth, charitable agencies, and wants. New York: Garland 1984. pp 323, il. [Reprint of 1868 edn]Google Scholar
435 Ebrahim, GJ, Social and community paediatrics in developing countries: caring for the rural and urban poor. Macmillan Education 1985.Google Scholar
436 Greenwood, J, The wilds of London. Garland 1985.Google Scholar
437 Grigg, S, The dependent poor of Newbury port: studies in social history. Ann Arbor, Mich.: UMI Research Press 1984. pp xiv + 146.Google Scholar
438 Mctighe, MJ, ‘True Philanthropy’ and the limits of the female sphere: Poor relief and labor organizations in Ante-Bellum Cleveland. LabH 27 (1986) 227–56.Google Scholar
439 Smith, BG & Shelton, C, The daily occurrence docket of the Philadelphia almhouse, selected entries, 1800–1804. PenH 52 (1985) 183205.Google Scholar
440 Withers, CWJ, Poor relief in Scotland and the General Register of Poor. LH 17 (1986) 1930.Google Scholar

Other social problems

441 Gratton, B, Urban elders: family, work, and welfare among Boston's aged, 1890–1950. Philadelphia: Temple UP 1985.Google Scholar
442 Hanson, B ed, Life with heroin: voices from the inner city. Lexington: Lexington Books 1985.Google Scholar
443 Harsin, J, Policing prostitution in nineteenth century Paris. Princetown: Princetown University Press 1985.Google Scholar
444 Morton, MJ, Seduced and abandoned in an American city: Cleveland and its fallen women, 1869–1936. JUH 11 (1985) 443–69.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

SOCIAL REFORM AND IMPROVEMENT: Social reform movement and institutions

445 Adams, PL, Fighting for democracy in St Lovis: Civil rights during World War II. MisHR 80 (1985) 5875.Google Scholar
446 Boylan, AM, Women in groups: an analysis of women'nevolent organizations in New York and Boston, 1797–1840 JAH 71 (1984) 497523.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
447 Burney, JM, Student organization in nineteenth century France: the example of Toulouse. HEdQ 25 (1985) 303–24.Google Scholar
448 Fainstein, SS & NI, , Economic restructuring and the rise of urban social movements. UAQ 21 (1985) 187206.Google Scholar
449 Huff, RA, Anne Miller and the Geneva political equality club, 1897–1912. NYH 65 (1984) 325–48.Google Scholar
450 Koehler, L, Women's rights, society, and the schools: feminist activities in Cincinnati, Ohio, 1864–1880. CinHSB 42 (1984) 317.Google Scholar
451 Lowe, S, Urban social movements. Basingstoke: Macmillan 1986. pp 300.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
452 Meranze, M, The penitential ideal in late eighteenth century Philadelphia. PenMHB 108 (1984) 419–50.Google Scholar
453 Shelton, BK, Organized mother love: the Buffalo Women's Educational and Industrial Union, 1885–1915. NYH 67 (1986) 155–76.Google Scholar
454 Thornton, TP, Between generations: Boston agricultural reform and the aging of New England, 1815–1830. NEQ 14 (1986) 189211.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

Charities

455 Bauman, MK, The emergence of Jewish social service agencies in Atlanta. GaHQ 69 (1985) 488508.Google Scholar
456 Casterline, GF, St Joseph's and St Mary's: the origins of Catholic hospitals in Philadelphia. PenMHB 108 (1984) 289314.Google Scholar
457 Romand, D, Charity and community in early renaissance Venice. JUH 11 (1984) 6381.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

MINORITY GROUPS: Racial and ethnic minorities

458 Alers-Montano, M, The Puerto Rican migrants of New York city: a study of anomie. New York: AMS Press 1985.Google Scholar
459 Andrews, D, The African methodists of Philadelphia, 1794–1802. PenMHB 108 (1984) 471–86.Google Scholar
460 Barrett, JR, Unity and fragmentation: class, race and ethnicity on Chicago's south side, 1900–1922. JSocH 18 (1984) 3756.Google Scholar
461 Baskavskas, L, An urban enclave: Lithuanian refugees in Los Angeles. New York: AMS Press 1985.Google Scholar
462 Bauman, MK, The emergence of Jewish social service agencies in Atlanta. GaHQ 69 (1985) 488508.Google Scholar
463 Berrol, SC, The Jewish west side of New York City, 1920–1970. JEIHS 13 (1986) 2146.Google Scholar
464 Broussard, AS, Strange territory, familiar leadership: the impact of World War II on San Francisco's Black community. CalH 65 (1986) 1825.Google Scholar
465 Bush, R ed, The new black vote. San Francisco: Synthesis Publications 1984. pp 392.Google Scholar
466 Cohen, RD, The dilemma of school integration in the North: Gary, Indiana, 1945–1960. InMH 82 (1986) 161–84.Google Scholar
467 Davis, TJ, A rumor of revolt: the ‘great negro plot’ in colonial New York. New York: Free Press 1985. pp 376.Google Scholar
468 Endelman, JE, The Jewish community of Indianapolis, 1849 to the present. Bloomington: Indiana UP 1987. pp. ix + 303, il.Google Scholar
469 Endelman, TM Communal solidarity and family loyalty among the Jewish elite of Victorian London. VS 28 (1985) 491526.Google Scholar
470 Fels, T, Religious assimilation in a fraternal organization: Jews and fraternity in Gilded Age San Francisco. AJH 74 (1985) 369403.Google Scholar
471 Foner, N, Race and color: Jamaican migrants in London and New York City. IMR 19 (1985) 708–27.Google ScholarPubMed
472 Francis-Jones, G, Cows, cardis and cockneys [London Welsh). Borth: Francis Jones 1984. pp 143, il.Google Scholar
473 Gelin, JA, Starting over: the formation of the Jewish community of Springfield, Massachusetts, 1840–1905. Lanham, MD: University Press of America 1984.Google Scholar
474 Harris, CV, Stability and change in discrimination against Black public schools: Birmingham, Alabama, 1871–1931. JSH 51 (1985) 375416.Google Scholar
475 Henig, GS, San Francisco Jewry and the Russian visa controversy of 1911. WSJHQ 18 (1985) 5866.Google Scholar
476 Hine, WC, Black organized labour in reconstruction Charleston. LabH 25 (1984) 504–17.Google Scholar
477 Jacobs, BD, Black politics and urban crisis in Britain. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1986.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
478 Johnson, M, Class and client in Beirut: the Sunni Muslim community and the Lebanese state, 18401985. Ithaca 1986.Google Scholar
479 Johnson, M, Surveying service users in multi-racial areas: the methodology of the Urban Institutions Project. Birmingham: SSRC 1984. pp 48.Google Scholar
480 Kamen, RM, Growing up Hasidic: Education and socialization in the Bobover Hasidic community. New York: AMS Press 1985.Google Scholar
481 Klayman, R, The first Jew: prejudice and politics in an American Community, 1900–1932. Maiden, Mass.: Old Suffolk Square Press 1985.Google Scholar
482 Laguerre, MS, American odyssey: Haitians in New York City. Ithaca: Cornell UP 1984. pp 198, il.Google Scholar
483 Lane, R, Roots of violence in Black Philadelphia, 1860–1900. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard UP 1986. pp 213, il.Google Scholar
484 Lee, BA, Spain, D & Umberson, DJ, Neighbourhood revitalization and racial change: the case of Washington DC. De 22 (1985) 581602.Google Scholar
485 Lindstrom-Brest, V, The Finnish immigrant community of Toronto, 1887–1913. Toronto: The Multicultural History Society of Ontario.Google Scholar
486 Lyman, SM, Chinatown and little Tokyo: power, conflict, and community among Chinese and Japanese immigrants to America. Port Washington, NY: Associated Faculty Press 1985.Google Scholar
487 Maldonado, L & Moore, J, Urban ethnicity in the United States: new immigrants and old minorities. Beverly Hills: Sage Publications 1985. pp 304, il.Google Scholar
488 Marcus, AI, Am I my brother's keeper: Reform Judaism in the American West, Cincinnati, 1840–1870. CinHSB 44 (1986) 319.Google Scholar
489 Marquez, B, Power and politics in a Chicano barrio: a study of mobilization efforts and community power in El Paso. Lanham: University Press of America 1985.Google Scholar
490 Miller, F, Black migration to Philadelphia: a 1924 profile. PenMHB 108 (1984) 315–50.Google Scholar
491 Miller, ZL, Cincinnati Germans and the invention of an ethnic group. CinHSB 42 (1984) 1322.Google Scholar
492 Miyamoto, SF, Social solidarity among the Japanese in Seattle. Seattle: University of Washington Press 1984. pp xxiv + 74, il.Google Scholar
493 Mohl, RA, An ethnic ‘boiling pot’. Cubans and Haitians in Miami. JEtHS 13 (1985) 5174.Google Scholar
494 Parkerson, DH, Race and ethnicity in the industrializing city. JFH 10 (1985) 402–8.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
495 Phillips, WD, Local integration and long distance ties: the Castilian community in sixteenth century Bruges. SCJ 17 (1986) 3350.Google Scholar
496 Pirie, GH & Hart, DM, The transformation of Johannesburg's black western areas. JUH 11 (1985) 387410.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
497 Pryce, K, Endless pressure: a study of West Indian life-styles in Bristol. Bristol: Bristol Classical 1986.Google Scholar
498 Rozenblit, ML, The Jews of Vienna, 1867–1914: assimilation and identity. Albany, SUNY Press 1983. pp xvii + 284, il.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
499 Sheehan, JB, The Boston School integration dispute: social change and legal maneuvers. New York: Columbia UP 1984.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
500 Smith, DM ed, Living under apartheid: aspects of urbanization and social change in South Africa. Allen & Unwin 1982.Google Scholar
501 Stahura, JM, Suburban development, Black suburbanization and the Civil Rights Movement since World War II. ASR 51 (1986) 131–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
502 Sussman, LJ, The suburbanization of American Judaism as reflected in Synagogue building and architecture, 1945–1975. AJH 75 (1985) 4860.Google Scholar
503 Swift, R & Gilley, S eds, The Irish in the Victorian city. Croom Helm 1985.Google Scholar
504 Taylor, HL, Spatial organization and the residential experience: Black Cincinnati in 1850. SSH 10 (1986) 4570.Google Scholar
505 Tolzmann, DH, The German image of Cincinnati before 1830. CinHSB 42 (1984) 31–9.Google Scholar
506 Trotter, JW, Black Milwaukee: the making of an industrial proletariat, 1915–1945. Urbana: U Illinois P 1985. pp xvii + 302.Google Scholar
507 Twersky, I, Danzig between east and west: aspects of modern Jewish history. Cambridge: Harvard UP 1983.Google Scholar
508 Von Der Mehden, FR, Ethnic groups of Houston. Houston: Rice UP 1984.Google Scholar
509 Waterman, S & Kosmin, B, The Jews of London. GM (1986) 21–7.Google Scholar
510 Weber, MP & Horawsa, E, East Europeans in steel towns: a comparative analysis. JUH 11 (1985) 280313.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
511 Weis, L, Between two worlds: Black students in an urban community college. Boston: Routledge & Kegan Paul 1985.Google Scholar
512 Williams, B, The making of Manchester Jewry, 1740–1875. Dover, New Hampshire: Manchester UP 1985.Google Scholar
513 Williams, PW, German American Catholicism in Cincinnati. Cin HSB 42 (1984) 2330.Google Scholar
514 Yox, AP, Bonds of community: Buffalo's German element, 1853–1871. NYH 66 (1985) 141–64.Google Scholar
515 Zeff, L, Jewish London. Piathus 1986. pp 160, il.Google Scholar

Majority reaction to minorities

516 Anderson, RD, Outcasts in their own land: Mexican industrial workers. Dekalb: Northern Illinois University Press 1976. pp 407.Google Scholar
517 Swift, RE, Anti-Catholicism and Irish disturbances: public order in mid-Victorian Wolverhampton. MidH 9 (1984).Google Scholar

WOMEN

518 Arrom, SM. The women of Mexico City, 1790–1857. Stanford: Stanford UP 1985.Google Scholar
519 Boylan, AM, Women in groups: an analysis of women's benevolent organizations in New York and Boston, 1797–1840. JAH 71 (1984) 497523.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
520 Bradbury, B, Women and wage labour in a period of transition: Montreal 1861–1881. HS/SH 17 (1984) 155–32.Google Scholar
521 Cody, M, The women of Montparnasse. New York: Cornwall Books, 1984. pp 192.Google Scholar
522 Dillard, H, Daughters of the reconquest: women in Castilian town society, 1100–1300. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1984. pp xii + 272, il.Google Scholar
523 Fawcett, JT, Khoo, SE & Smith, PC eds, Women in the cities of Asia: migration and urban adaptation. Epping: Bowker 1984. pp xviii + 406.Google Scholar
524 Flammang, JA ed, Political women: current roles in state and local government. Beverly Hills: Sage Publications 1984. pp 320.Google Scholar
525 Hewitt, NA, Women's activism and social change, Rochester, New York, 1822–1872. Ithaca: Cornell UP 1984.Google Scholar
526 Kissel, SS, Conservative Cincinnati and its outspoken women writers. CinHSB 44 (1986) 2030.Google Scholar
527 Mctighe, MJ, True philanthropy and the limits of the female sphere: poor relief and labour organizations in Ante-Bellum Cleveland. LH 27 (1986) 227–56.Google Scholar
528 Morton, MJ, Seduced and abandoned in an American city: Cleveland and its fallen women, 1869–1936. JUH 11 (1985) 443–69.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
529 Roberts, E, A woman's place: an oral history of working-class women, 1890–1940. Oxford: Blackwell 1984. pp vii + 246, il.Google Scholar
530 Tinker, I ed, Women in Washington: advocates for public policy. Beverly Hills: Sage Publications 1983. pp 323.Google Scholar

V ECONOMIC ACTIVITY: RESEARCH METHODS, AIDS AND MATERIALS

531 Eichengren, B & Freiwald, S, From survey to sample: Labor market data for interwar London. HMN 18 (1985) 125–36.Google Scholar

Research methods

532 Honeywell, S, Researching corporations: developing community/corporate partnerships. Chicago: National Training and Information Centre 1983.Google Scholar

Printed documentary sources

533 Jeremy, DJ ed, Dictionary of business biography: a biographical dictionary of business leaders active in Britain in the period 1860–1980. Butterworth 1986.Google Scholar

Theory

534 Banouetz, JM ed, Small cities and counties: a guide to managing services. Washington: International City Management Association 1984. pp 356.Google Scholar
535 Bingham, RD & Blair, JP, Urban economic development. Beverly Hills: Sage Publications 1984.Google Scholar
536 Noyelle, TJ & Stanback, TM, The economic transformation of American cities. Totowa: Rowman & Allan held 1984. pp 298.Google Scholar

URBAN ECONOMIC ACTIVITY: General

537 Checkland, SG, The city and the business man viewed historically: an aspect of the performance of capitalism. Leicester: Victorian Studies Centre Leicester University 1986.Google Scholar
538 Harvey, D, The urbanization of capital. Oxford: Blackwell 1985.Google Scholar

Ancient

539 Finley, MI, Studies in land and credit in ancient Athens, 500–200B.C: The horos inscriptions. New Brunswick: Transaction Books 1985. [Reprint of 1951 edn]Google Scholar

Medieval and early modern

540 Goose, NR, In search of the urban variable: towns and the English economy 1500–1650. EHR 39 (1986) 165–85.Google Scholar
541 Nightingale, P, The London pepperers' guild and some twelfth century English trading links with Spain. BIHR 58 (1985) 123–32.Google Scholar

Modern

542 Dennis-Jones, H, Long Beach gets back into boom. GM (1985) 552–6.Google Scholar
543 Folsom, BW, Urban capitalists: entrepreneurs and city growth in Pennsylvania's Lackawanna and Le high regions, 1800–1920. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press 1978.Google Scholar
544 Greenfield, GM, Patterns of enterprise in Sao Paulo: preliminary analysis of a late nineteenth century city. SSH 8 (1984) 291312.Google Scholar
545 Lever, W & Moore, C, The city in transition: policies and agencies for the economic regeneration of Clydeside. Oxford: Clarendon 1986.Google Scholar
546 Lindstrom, D, Economic development in the Philadelphia region, 1810–1850. New York: Columbia University Press 1979.Google Scholar
547 Mcconaghy, M, The Whitaker mill, 1813–1843: a case study of workers, technology and community in early industrial Philadelphia. PenH 51 (1984) 3063.Google Scholar
548 Meyer, DR, The world system of cities: Relations between international finance metropolises and south American cities, SF 67 (1986) 553–81.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
549 Qadeer, M & Chinnery, K, Canadian towns and villages: an economic profile, 1981. Winnipeg: Institute of Urban Studies 1986. pp 41.Google Scholar
550 Sternlieb, G & Ustokin, D eds, New tools for economic development: the enterprise zone, development bank, and RFC. Piscataway: Centre for Urban Policy Research 1981. pp 238.Google Scholar
551 Young, B, In its corporate capacity: the seminary of Montreal as a business institution, 1816–1876. Toronto: McGill-Queen's UP 1986. pp 304.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

INDUSTRY

552 Babcock, RH, Private vs. Public enterprise: a comparison of two Atlantic seaboard cities, in Stelter, GA & Artibase, AFJ, Powers and place. Vancouver: University of British Columbia 1986, 5181.Google Scholar
553 Bell, F, At the works: a study of a manufacturing town [Middlesborough] Virago 1985. pp xxxii + 272, il.Google Scholar
554 Blackmore, HL, A dictionary of London gunmakers 1350–1850. Oxford: Phaidon Christies's 1986.Google Scholar
555 Duggan, E, The impact of industrialization on an urban labor market: Birmingham, England, 1770–1860. New York: Garland 1985.Google Scholar
556 Hilton, RH, Medieval market towns and simple commodity production. PaP 109 (1985) 323.Google Scholar
557 Persky, J & Moses, R, Specialized industrial cities in the United States 1860–1930. JHG 10 (1984) 3751.Google Scholar
558 Pretzer, WS, The British, Duff Green, the rats and the devil: custom, capitation, and conflict in the Washington printing trade, 1834–36. LH 27 (1985) 530.Google Scholar
559 Ross, SJ, Industrialization and the changing images of progress in nineteenth-century Cincinnati. CinHSB 43 (1985) 324.Google Scholar
560 Ryon, RN, Baltimore workers and industrial decision-making, 1890–1917. JSH 51 (1985) 565–80.Google Scholar
561 Scott, AJ, Industrial organization and the logic of intra-metropolitan location, III: a case study of the women's dress industry in the greater Los Angeles region. EcG 60 (1984) 327.Google Scholar
562 Scranton, P, Milling about: family firms and urban manufacturing in textile Philadelphia, 1840–1865. JUH 10 (1984) 259–94.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
563 Scranton, P, Proprietary Capitalism: the textile manufacture at Philadelphia, 1800–1885. New York: Cambridge UP 1983.Google Scholar
564 Sessions of York: and their primitive forebears. York: William Sessions Ltd. 1985.Google Scholar
565 Stafford shoes. Stafford: Staffordshire County Council Education Department 1984.Google Scholar
566 Stave, BM & Stave, SA eds, Urban bosses, machines and progressive reformers. Malabar: Robert E. Krieger Publishing Company 1984. pp 239.Google Scholar
567 Stearn, B, Croydon cars: the history of car manufacturing in the London Borough of Croydon 1896–1985. Croydon: Stearn 1985.Google Scholar
568 Wallace, W, Some notes on the coal industry in Hamilton. Hamilton: Bell College 1985.Google Scholar

EXTERNAL TRADE AND SERVICES

569 Eberstein, IW & Gralle, OR, The metropolitan system in the South: functional differentiation and trade patterns. SF 62 (1984) 926–40.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
570 Harris, JR, Michael Alcock and the transfer of Birmingham technology to France before the revolution. JEEH 15 (1986) 758.Google Scholar
571 Mostyn, J, Plenty of brave wines: trading at Bristol through the ages. CL 12 (1986) 1662–4.Google Scholar
572 Siener, WH, Charles Yates, The grain trade, and economic development in Fredericksburg, Virginia, 1750–1810. VMHB 93 (1985) 409–26.Google Scholar
573 White, JH, An early chapter in freight handling, Cincinnati and the container. CinHSB 73 (1985) 2534.Google Scholar

INTERNAL TRADE

574 Brown, R, The Portsmouth emporium: a nostalgic reminder of some of the traders, shops and businesses that flourished in the Portsmouth that has passed. Harndean: Minestone 1985.Google Scholar
575 Hodges, G, New York city cartmen, 1667–1850. New York: New York UP 1986.Google Scholar
576 Wolch, JR & Geiger, RK, Urban restructuring and the not-for-profit sector. EcG 62 (1986) 318.Google Scholar

Food supply

577 Kaplan, SL, Provisioning Paris: merchants and millers in the grain and flour trade during the eighteenth century. Ithaca: Cornell UP 1984.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

Retailing

578 Sternlieb, G & Hughes, JW eds, Shopping centres: USA. Piscataway: Centre for Urban Policy Research 1981. pp. 325.Google Scholar

Finance, banking and insurance

579 Baum, HP, Annuities in late medieval Hanse towns. BuHR 59 (1985) 2448.Google Scholar
580 Cassis, Y, Bankers in English society in the late nineteenth century. EHR 2 (1985) 210–29.Google Scholar
581 Clarke, M, Regulating the city: competition, scandal and reform [London]. Milton Keynes: Open University Press 1986.Google Scholar
582 Clarke, WM, How the city of London works: an introduction to its financial markets. Waterlow 1986.Google Scholar
583 Esbitt, M, Bank portfolios and bank failures during the great depression: Chicago. JEcH 46 (1986) 455–62.Google Scholar
584 Flam, H, Democracy in debt: credit and politics in Paterson, N.J., 1890–1930. JSocH 18 (1985) 439–62.Google Scholar
585 Michie, RC, The London and New York stock exchanges, 1850–1914. JEcH 46 (1986) 171–88.Google Scholar
586 Plender, J, The square mile: a guide to the new city of London. Century 1985.Google Scholar

Other non-municipal services

587 Eversole, TW, From trade to profession—the rise of mortuary science in Cincinnati. CinHSB 43 (1985) 35–9.Google ScholarPubMed
588 Grubb, F, The market for indentured immigrants: Evidence on the efficiency of forward labor contracting in Philadelphia, 1745–1773. JEcH 45 (1985) 855–68.Google Scholar
589 Poulter, JD, An early history of electricity supply: the story of the electric light in Victorian Leeds. Stevenage: Peregrinus 1986.Google Scholar

CONSUMPTION: Living standards

590 Schwarz, LD, The standard of living in the long run: London, 1700–1860. EHR 38 (1985) 2441.Google Scholar
591 Sternlieb, G & Hughes, JW, Income and jobs: USA: diagnosing and reality. New Brunswick: Rutyers, the State University of New Jersey 1984. pp 120.Google Scholar
592 Walsh, LS, Urban amenities and rural sufficiency: living standards and consumer behaviour in the colonial Chesapeake, 1643–1777. JEcH 43 (1984) 109–17.Google Scholar

Consumption patterns

593 Pinch, S, Cities and services: the geography of collective consumption. Routledge & Kegan Paul 1985.Google Scholar

WORKING CONDITIONS

594 Duncan, R, Textiles and toil: the factory system and the industrial working class in early 19th century Aberdeen. Aberdeen: Aberdeen City Libraries 1984. pp vii + 56, il.Google Scholar
595 Graebner, W, Help wanted: Age discrimination in Buffalo, New York, 1895–1935. NYH 65 (1984) 349–66.Google Scholar
596 Greenwood, J, The seven curses of London. Garland 1984. pp viii + 461.Google Scholar
597 Ryon, RN, Baltimore workers and industrial decision making, 1890–1917. JSH 51 (1985) 565–80.Google Scholar

COMPANY TOWNS

598 Gardner, JS, The model company town: urban design through private enterprise in nineteenth-century New England. Amherst: U Massachusetts P 1984. pp xiv + 288.Google Scholar
599 Marcus, IM, The deindustrialization of America: Homestead, a case study, 1959–1984. PenH 52 (1985) 162–82.Google Scholar

LABOUR ORGANIZATION

600 Berlanstein, LR, The working people of Paris, 1871–1914. Johns Hopkins University Press 1984. pp xvii + 274, il.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
601 Burges, K, Authority relations and the division of labour in British industry, with special reference to Clydeside, c. 1860–1930. SH 11 (1986) 211–34.Google Scholar
602 Garrioch, D & Sonenscher, M, Compagnonnages, confraternities and associations of journeymen in eighteenth century Paris. EHQ 16 (1986) 2546.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
603 Harrison, M, The ordering of the urban environment: time, work and the occurrence of crowds, 1790–1835. PaP 110 (1986) 134–68.Google Scholar
604 Mctighe, MJ, True philanthropy and the limits of the female sphere: poor relief and labour organisations in ante-bellum Cleveland. LH 27 (1986) 227–56.Google Scholar

Trade unions

605 Bellush, J, Union power and New York: Victor Gotbaum and District Council 37. Eastbourne: Praeger 1984.Google Scholar
606 Biles, R, Ed Crump versus the unions: the labor movement in Memphis during the 1930s. LabH 25 (1984) 533–52.Google Scholar
607 Fones-Wolf, E, Industrial unionism and labor movement culture in depression-era Philadelphia. PenMHB 109 (1985) 326.Google Scholar
608 Freedman, S, Organizing the workers in a steel company town: the union movement in Joliet, 1870–1920. JIUSHS 79 (1986) 218.Google Scholar
609 Hine, WC, Black organized labor in reconstruction Charleston. LabH 25 (1984) 504–17.Google Scholar
610 Nelson, D, The CIO at bay: labor miltancy and politics in Akron, 1936–1938. JAH 71 (1984) 565–86.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

Strikes and lock outs

611 Cornforth, W, The long hard road: the story of Darlington railway men and the struggle for social justice. Darlington: D. Cornforth 1985.Google Scholar
612 Haas, JM, Trouble at the workplace: industrial relations in the royal dockyards, 1889–1914. BIHR 58 (1985) 210–25.Google Scholar
613 Piott, SL, The Chicago teamsters' strike of 1902: A community confronts the beef trust. LabH 26 (1985) 250–67.Google Scholar
614 Roediger, DR, ‘Not only the ruling classes to overcome, but also the so-called mob:’ class, skill and community in the St Louis general strike of 1877. JSocH 19 (1985) 213–40.Google Scholar
615 Rosemont, H, Benjamin Franklin and the Philadelphia Typographical Strikers of 1786. Chicago: Charles H. Kerr Publishing Company 1984. pp 38.Google Scholar
616 Santos, MW, Community and communism: the 1928 New Bedford textile strike. LabH 26 (1985) 230–49.Google Scholar
617 Schneider, D, The New York cigarmakers strike of 1877. LabH 26 (1985) 325–52.Google Scholar

Redundancy and unemployment

618 Bond, S, Taking over the city: threats to the future of services and jobs in Sheffield. Sheffield: 1985.Google Scholar
619 Buck, NH, Tlie London unemployment problem. Oxford: Clarendon 1986.Google Scholar
620 Getis, A, The economic health of municipalities within a metropolitan region: the case of Chicago. EcG 62 (1986) 5274.Google Scholar
621 Henderson, RA, The employment performance of established manufacturing industry in the Scottish new towns. Edinburgh: Scottish Economic Planning Department 1982.Google Scholar
622 Kidd, AJ, The Social Democratic Federation and popular agitation among the unemployed in Edwardian Manchester. IRSH 29 (1984).Google Scholar
623 Leith lives—unemployment: making ends meet: a look at unemployment between the wars. HMSO 1985.Google Scholar
624 Mier, R, Job generation as a road to recovery, in Porter, PR & Sweet, DC eds, Rebuilding America's cities: roads to recovery. New Brunswick: Centre for Urban Policy Research 1984, 160–72.Google Scholar
625 Redundancies in Dundee: summary of a study conducted with the Department of Economics Dundee University. Edinburgh: Scottish Economic Planning Department 1980.Google Scholar
626 Simmons, JW, Government and the Canadian urban system: income tax, transfer payments, and employment. CanGeog 28 (1984) 1845.Google Scholar

VI COMMUNICATIONS: MODES OF INTER-URBAN COMMUNICATION

627 Foster, MS, From streetcar to super highway: American city planners and urban transportation, 1900–1940. Philadelphia: Temple University Press 1981. pp 246.Google Scholar
628 Smith, WD, The function of commercial centers in the modernization of European capitalism: Amsterdam as an information exchange in the seventeenth century. JEcH 44 (1984) 9851006.Google Scholar
629 Edner, SM, The evolution of an urban intergovernmental transportation decision system: Portland's investment in light transit. JUA 6 (1984) 8196.Google Scholar

Shipping

630 Milne, G, The port of Roman London. Batsford 1985.Google Scholar
631 Turner, J, Scotland; North Sea gateway: Aberdeen harbour AD. 1136–1986. Aberdeen: Aberdeen University Press 1986.Google Scholar

Railways

632 Jackson, A, London's metropolitan railway: a history of the Metropolitan Railway Company. Newton Abbott: David & Charles 1986.Google Scholar
633 Richards, J, The railway station: a social history. Oxford: Oxford University Press 1986.Google Scholar
634 Stilgoe, JR, Metropolitan corridor: railroads and the American scene. New Haven: Yale University Press 1983.Google Scholar
635 Turner, G, Ashford: the coming of the railway. Maidstone: Chris Swift 1984.Google Scholar

Air

636 Myerscough, J, Airport provision in the inter-war years. JCH 20 (1985) 4170.Google Scholar

MODES OF INTRA-URBAN COMMUNICATION

637 Diandas, J, Alternative approaches to transport in third world cities: issues in equity and accessibility. E 51 (1984) 197211.Google Scholar
638 Evans, AW & Beed, C, Transport costs and urban property values in the 1970s. US 23 (1986) 105–18.Google Scholar
639 Goheen, PG, Communications and urban systems in mid-nineteenth century Canada. UHR 14 (1986) 235–45.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

Roads

640 Papayanis, N, The coachmen of Paris: a statistical prolfile. JcH 20 (1985) 305–22.Google Scholar

Public transport

641 Armstrong, C & Nelles, HV, Suburban street railway strategies in Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver, 1896–1930, in Stelter, GA & Artibise, AFJ Power and place. Vancouver: University of British Columbia 1986, 187218.Google Scholar
642 Lave, CA ed, Urban transit: the private challenge to public transportation. San Francisco: Pacific Institute for Public Policy Research 1985. ppxxii + 372.Google Scholar

Individual transport

643 Thoms, D & Donnelly, T, The motor car in Coventry since the 1890s. New York: St Martin's Press 1985. pp 243.Google Scholar

Journey to work

644 Dasguptn, M, Frost, M & Spence, N, Interaction between urban form and mode choice for the work journey: Manchester/Sheffield, 1971–1981. ReS 19 (1985) 315–28.Google Scholar

VII POLITICAL STRUCTURE: RESEARCH METHODS, AIDS AND MATERIALS: Theory

645 Magnasson, W & Sancton, A eds, City politics in Canada. Toronto: University of Toronto Press 1983. pp 388.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
646 Sbrgia, A, Municipal money chase: the politics of local government finance. Boulder: Westview Press 1983.Google Scholar

URBAN POLITICS AND ADMINISTRATION: General

647 Baccigalupo, A, Les administrations municipales québecoises, des origines à nos jours [Québec]. Montreal: Agence d'Arc 1984.Google Scholar
648 Carr, JH ed, Crisis and constraint in municipal finance. New Brunswick: Centre for Urban Policy Research 1984. pp 424.Google Scholar
649 Formisano, RP & Burns, CK, Boston 1700–1980: the evolution of urban politics. Westport: Greenwood Press 1984.Google Scholar
650 Haar, CM ed, Cities, law and social policy: learning from the British. Lexington: Lexington Books 1984.Google Scholar
651 Lewandowski, SJ, Merchants and kingship: an interpretation of Indian urban history. JUH 11 (1985) 151–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
652 Macdonald, TJ & Ward, SK eds, The politics of urban fiscal policy. Sage 1984.Google Scholar
653 Macmanus, SA, Federal aid to Houston. Washington D.C.: The Brockings Institution 1983.Google Scholar
654 Quah, JST, Government and politics of Singapore. Oxford: Oxford University Press 1985.Google Scholar
655 Wichern, P, Metropolitan reform and the restructuring of local government in the North American city, in Stelter, GA & Artibise, AFJ eds, Power and place. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press 1986, 292322.Google Scholar

Ancient

655a Eckstein, AM, Polybius, Syracuse, and the politics of accommodation. GRBS 26 (1985) 265–82.Google Scholar
656 Unz, RK, The surplus of Athenian Phoros. GRBS 26 (1985) 2142.Google Scholar

Medieval and early modern

657 Butters, HC, Governors and government in early sixteenth century Florence, 1502–1519. Oxford: Clarendon 1985.Google Scholar
658 Conlon, FF, Caste, community, and colonialism: the elements of population recruitment and urban rule in British Bombay, 1665–1830. JUH 11 (1985) 181208.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
659 Dingwall, H, The importance of social factors in determining the composition of the town councils in Edinburgh, 1550–1650. SHR 65 (1986) 1733.Google Scholar
660 Rosswurm, S, Equality and justice: documents from Philadelphia's popular revolution, 1775–1780. PenH 52 (1985) 254–68.Google Scholar

Modern

661 Abbott, C, The new urban America: growth and politics in sunbelt cities. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press 1981. pp 317.Google Scholar
662 Bloomfield, E, Bonusing and boosterism: industrial promotion by Ontario municipalities to 1930. PHB 7 (1985) 23–9.Google Scholar
663 Bloomfield, E, Community leadership and decision making: entrepreneurial elites in two Ontario towns, 1870–1930, in Stelter, GA & Artibise, AFJ, Power and place. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press 1986, 82104.Google Scholar
664 Boles, JK, The egalitarian city: issues of rights, distribution, access, and power. New York: Praeger 1986.Google Scholar
665 Booth, DE, Municipal socialism and city government reform: the Milwaukee experience, 1910–1940, JUH 12 (1985) 5174.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
666 Boulay, H & Digaetano, A, Why did political machines disappear? JUH 12 (1985) 2550.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
667 Bridges, A, A city in the republic: ante bellum New York and the origins of machine politics. New York: Cambridge UP 1984.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
668 Cole, RT, Rome: Some political highlights after fifty years, 1934–84. SAQ 84 (1985) 314–27.Google Scholar
669 Cook, R, Portsmouth at the polls: one hundred and fifty years of reformed elections in a naval dockyard borough, 1832–1982. Studley: Brewin 1982.Google Scholar
670 Ettinger, BG, John Fitzpatrick and the limits of working-class politics in New Orleans, 1892–1896. LaH 26 (1985) 341–68.Google Scholar
671 Flam, H, Democracy in debt: credit and politics in Paterson, NJ 1890–1930. JSocH 18 (1985) 439–62.Google Scholar
672 Flanagan, MA, Charter reform in Chicago: Political culture and urban progressive reform. JUH 12 (1986) 109–30.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
673 Fox, K, Metropolitan America: urban life and urban policy in the United States, 1940–1980. Jackson: University of Mississippi Press 1986. pp. xiii + 274, il.Google Scholar
674 Fritz, JM, Vijayanagara: Authority and meaning of a South Indian Imperial Capital. AAnth 88 (1986) 4455.Google Scholar
675 Gottdiener, M ed, Cities in stress: new look at the urban crisis. Beverly Hills: Sage Publications 1986.Google Scholar
676 Jones, PE, Bangor 1883–1983: a study in municipal government. Cardiff: University of Wales Press 1986.Google Scholar
677 Kann, ME, Middle class radicalism in Santa Monica. Philadelphia: Temple UP 1986.Google Scholar
678 Kleppner, P, Chicago divided: the making of a Black mayor. DeKalb: Northern Illionois UP, 1984.Google Scholar
679 Mandel, D, The Petrograd workers and the fall of the old regime: from the February revolution to the July days, 1917. New York: St Martin's Press, 1983. pp xii + 210, il.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
680 Mandel, D, The Petrograd workers and the Soviet seizure of power: From the July days, 1917 to July 1918. New York: St Martin's Press 1984. pp. xv + 211.Google Scholar
681 Marquez, B, Power and politics in a Chicano barrio: a study of mobilization efforts and community power in El Paso. Lanham: University Press of America 1985.Google Scholar
682 Mcdonald, TJ & Ward, SK, The politics of urban fiscal policy. Beverly Hills: Sage Publications 1984. pp 208.Google Scholar
683 Mercer, J & Goldberg, MA, The fiscal health of American and Canadian cities. Syracuse: Maxwell School 1984.Google Scholar
684 Merriman, JM, The Red city: Limoges and the French nineteenth century. New York: Oxford UP 1985.Google Scholar
685 Murray, JM, Bosses and reformers: the Jersey city victory movement of 1957. NJH 103 (1985) 3368.Google Scholar
686 Needell, JD, Making the Carioca belle epoque concrete: the urban reforms of Rio de Janeiro under Pereira Passos. JUH 10 (1984) 383422.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
687 Newman, RP, Red scare in Seattle, 1952: the FBI, the CIA, and Owen Lattimore's ‘Escape’. H 48 (1985) 6181.Google Scholar
688 Owen, CJ, Governing metropolitan Indianapolis: the politics of unigov. Berkeley: University of California Press 1985.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
689 Quah, JST et al. ed, Government and politics of Singapore. New York: Oxford UP 1985. pp xviii + 324.Google Scholar
690 Roper, H, The Halifax board of control: the failure of municipal reform, 1906–1919. Acad 14 (1985) 4665.Google Scholar
691 Sancton, A, Governing the island of Montreal: language differences and Metropolitan politics. Berkeley: University of California Press 1986. pp 213.Google Scholar
692 Scheiner, SM, Commission government in the progressive era: the New Brunswick, New Jersey, example. JUH 12 (1986) 157–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
693 Sitton, T, The ‘boss’ without a machine: Kent K. Parrot and Los Angeles politics in the 1920s. SCalQ 17 (1985) 365–88.Google Scholar
694 Slovak, JS, City spending, suburban demands, and fiscal exploitation: a replication and extension. SF 64 (1985) 168–90.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
695 Stevens, EW, Labor and socialism in an Indiana mill town, 1905–1921. LabH 26 (1985) 353–83.Google Scholar
696 Teaford, JC, The unheralded triumph: city government in America, 1870–1900. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press 1984.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
697 Walker, JT, Socialism in Dayton, Ohio, 1912 to 1925: Its membership, organization and demise. LabH 26 (1985) 387404.Google Scholar
698 Warren, CR ed, Urban policy in a changing federal system: proceedings of a symposium. Washington D.C.: National Academy Press 1985. pp x + 278, il.Google Scholar
699 Weitz, ED, Social continuity and political radicalization: Essen in the World War I era. SSH 9 (1985) 4970.Google Scholar

URBAN POLITICS AT NATIONAL LEVEL

700 Baker, M, St John's municipal politics, 1902–1914. NEQ 79 (1983) 2330.Google Scholar
701 Eisinger, PK, The search for a national urban policy, 1968–1980. JUH 12 (1985) 324.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
702 Fossett, JW, Federal aid to big cities: the politics of dependence. Washington D.C.: The Brookings Institution 1983.Google Scholar
703 Fox, K, Metropolitan America: Urban life and urban policy in the United States, 1940–1980. Jackson: University of Mississippi Press 1986. pp xiii + 274, il.Google Scholar
704 Hays, RA, The federal government and urban housing: ideology and change in public policy. SUNY UP 1985.Google Scholar
705 Henig, GS, San Francisco Jewry and the Russian visa controversy of 1911. WSJHQ 18 (1985) 5866.Google Scholar
706 Jacobs, BD, Black politics and urban crisis in Britain. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1986.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
707 Kelikian, AA, Town and country under Fascism: the transformation of Brescia, 1915–26. Oxford: Clarendon 1986.Google Scholar
708 Ledebur, LC, The Regan revolution and beyond, in Porter, PR & Sweet, DC eds, The rebuilding of America's cities: roads to recovery. New Brunswick: Centre for Urban Policy Research 1984, 191208.Google Scholar
709 Muller, T, Urban and regional change: the federal role and national policy, in Carr, JH ed, Crisis and constraint in municipal finance. New Brunswick: Centre for Urban Policy Research 1984, 342–9.Google Scholar
710 Peterson, GE & Lewis, CW eds, Reagan and the Cities. Washington D.C.: Urban Institute Press 1986.Google Scholar
711 Sacks, DH, The corporate town and the English state: Bristol's little business, 1625–1641. PaP 110 (1986) 69105.Google Scholar
712 Sayles, SP, Hetch Hetchy reversed: A rural-urban struggle for power. CalH 64 (1985) 254–63.Google Scholar
713 Thomas, RD, Cities as partners in the federal system. PSQ 101 (1986) 4964.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
714 Warren, CR ed, Urban policy in a changing federal system: proceedings of a symposium. Washington D.C.: National Academy Press 1985. pp x + 278, il.Google Scholar
715 Weinberg, M, The urban fiscal crisis: impact on budgeting and fiscal planning practices of urban America. JuA 6 (1984) 3952.Google Scholar

ASPECTS OF URBAN ADMINISTRATION

716 Ferman, B, Governing the ungovernable city: political skill, leadership, and the modern mayor. Philadelphia: Temple UP 1985.Google Scholar
717 Mohl, RA, Miami's metropolitan government: retrospect and prospect. FlaHQ 63 (1984) 2450.Google Scholar

Public health

718 Andrews, MW, The emergence of bureaucracy: the Vancouver health department, 1886–1914. JUH 12 (1986) 131–56.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
719 Cubtin, PD, Medical knowledge and urban planning in tropical Africa. AHR 90 (1985) 594613.Google Scholar
720 Hoy, S, Public health and sanitation in an Indiana community: the garbage disposer and Jasper. InMH 82 (1986) 139–60.Google Scholar
721 Mayhew, L, Urban hospital location. Allen & Unwin 1986.Google Scholar

Welfare

722 Whites, L, The charitable and the poor: the emergence of domestic politics in Augusta, Georgia, 1860. JSocH 17 (1984) 601–16.Google Scholar

Police

723 Alderson, J, Police and public order. Pa 63 (1985) 435–44.Google Scholar
724 Harsin, J, Policing prostitution in nineteenth century Paris. Princeton: Princeton UP 1985.Google Scholar
725 Lock, J, Blue murder?: policemen under suspicion. Hale 1986.Google Scholar
726 Monkkonen, EH, Police in urban America 1860–1920. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1981. pp 220.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
727 Rousey, DC, Yellow fever and black policemen in Memphis: A post-reconstruction anomaly. JSH 51 (1985) 357–74.Google ScholarPubMed

PUBLIC UTILITIES

728 Dixon, W, The London prisons: with an account of the more distinguished persons who have been confined in them. New York: Garland 1985.Google Scholar
729 Fitzherbert, K, Monument to humanity: Hanwell lunatic asylum [London]. CL 05 1960–1.Google Scholar
730 Marlin, JT, Contracting municipal services: a guide for purchase from the private sector. New York: Ronald Press 1984.Google Scholar
731 Platt, HL, City building in the new south: the growth of public services in Houston, Texas, 1830–1910. Philadelphia: Temple University Press 1983. pp 252.Google Scholar
732 Rosen, CM, Infrastructural improvement in nineteenth century cities: a conceptual framework and cases. JUH 12 (1986) 211–56.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

Power

733 Erlick, DP, The Peales and gas lights in Baltimore. MdHM 80 (1985) 918.Google Scholar

Water

734 Anderson, L, Hard Choices: Supplying water to New England towns. JInH 15 (1984) 211–34.Google ScholarPubMed
735 Crouch, DP, The Hellenistic water system of Morgantina, Sicily: Contributions to the history of urbanization. AJA 88 (1984) 353–65.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

VIII SHAPING THE URBAN ENVIRONMENT: RESEARCH METHODS. AIDS AND MATERIALS

736 Krueckenberg, DA, Introduction to planning history in the United States. Piscataway: Centre for Urban Policy Research 1983. pp 302.Google Scholar

Theory

737 Hodge, G, Planning Canadian communities: an introduction to the principles, practice and participants. Toronto: Methuen 1986.Google Scholar

TOWN PLANNING AND ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROL

738 Clay, PL & Hollister, RM eds, Neighbourhood policy and planning. Lexington: Lexington Books 1983. pp 228.Google Scholar
739 Doughty, M, Building the city. Leicester: Leicester University Press 1986.Google Scholar
740 Jones, H et al. , Peripheral counter urbanization: findings from an integration of census and survey data in northern Scotland. ReS 20 (1986) 1526.Google ScholarPubMed
741 Lovering, J, The success of Bristol the failure of South Wales. Cardiff: Department of Town Planning, University of Wales 1984.Google Scholar
742 Stelter, GA, Guelph and the early Canadian town planning tradition. OntH 77 (1985) 83–06.Google Scholar

Medieval and early modern

743 Cox, RJ, Trouble on the chain gang: city surveying, maps, and the absence of urban planning in Baltimore, 1730–1823; with a checklist of maps of the period. MdHM 81 (1986) 849.Google Scholar
744 Stelter, GA, The classical ideal: culture and urban form in eighteenth-century Britain and America. JUH 10 (1984) 351–82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

Modern

745 Barnett, J, Pittsburgh: urban design as a survival tool. UDI 5 (1984) 26–9.Google Scholar
746 Clavel, P, The progressive city: planning and participation, 19691984. New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers UP 1986.Google Scholar
747 Costa, FJ & Noble, AG, Planning Arabic towns. GR 76 (1986) 160–72.Google Scholar
748 Datel, RE, Preservation and a sense of orientation for American cities. GR 75 (1985) 125–41.Google Scholar
749 Garland, GG & Kruger, D, Durban's beach reclaimed. GM (1985) 608–11.Google Scholar
750 Garner, JS, The model company town: urban design through private enterprise in nineteenth century New England. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press 1984. pp xiv + 288.Google Scholar
751 Lampe, JR, Interwar Sofia versus the nazi-style garden city: the struggle over the Muesmann Plan. JUH 11 (1984) 3962.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
752 Malchow, HL, Public gardens and social action in late Victorian London. VS (1985) 97124.Google Scholar
753 Mortal, EN, Rebuilding America's cities. Cambridge, Mass: Bullinger Pub. Co. 1986.Google Scholar
754 Needell, JD, Making the Carioca belle epoque concrete: the urban reforms of Rio de Janeiro under Pereira Passos. JUH 10 (1984) 383422.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
755 Neil, JM, Paris or New York? The shaping of downtown Seattle, 1903–14. PacNWQ 75 (1984) 2233.Google Scholar
756 Pack, JR, Urban spatial transformation: Philadelphia, 1850 to 1880, hetrogeneity to homogeneity? SSH 8 (1984) 425–54.Google Scholar
757 Power, G, High Society: the building height limitation on Baltimore's Mt. Vernon Place. MdHM 79 (1984) 197219.Google Scholar
758 Sheail, J, Interwar planning in Britain: the wider context. JUH 11 (1985) 335–51.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
759 Smith, PJ, American influences and local needs: adaptation to the Alberta planning system in 1928–29, in Stelter, GA & Artibise, AFJ, Power and place. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press 1986, 109–32.Google Scholar
760 Terpstra, N, Local politics and local planning: a case study of Hamilton, Ontario, 1915–1930. UHR 14 (1985) 114–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
761 Van Nas, W, The role of suburban government in the city building process: the case of Notre Dame de Graces, Québec, 1876–1910. UHR 13 (1984) 91103.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

UTOPIAN PLANNING AND EXPERIMENTS

762 Aitken, CP, Small holdings and the garden city ideal: a Stirling example. LH 17 (1986) 31–8.Google Scholar
763 Jones, GF, Peter Gordon's (?) plan of Savannah. GaHQ 70 (1986) 97101.Google Scholar
764 Levin, EA, City planning as Utopian ideology and city government function. Winnipeg: Institute of Urban Studies 1984. pp 34.Google Scholar

HOUSING IMPROVEMENT

765 Shapiro, AL, Housing the poor of Paris, 1850–1902. Madison: Wisconsin UP 1985. pp 224, il.Google Scholar
766 Wiedenhoeft, RV, Berlin's housing revolution: German reform in the 1920s. Ann Arbor, Michigan: UMI Research Press 1985. pp xx + 204, il.Google Scholar

Public housing

767 Fairbanks, RB, From better dwellings to better community: changing approaches to the low-cost housing problem, 1890–1925. JUH 11 (1985) 314–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
768 Hays, RA, The federal government and urban housing: ideology and change in public policy. SUNY UP 1985.Google Scholar
769 Morgan, I, The Fort Wayne Plan: the FHA and prefabricated municipal housing in the 1930s. H 47 (1985) 538–59.Google Scholar

Slum clearance

770 Baker, M, In search of the New Jerusalem: slum clearance in St John's, 1921–1944. NEQ 79 (1983) 2332.Google Scholar
771 Listokin, D & Beaton, WP, Revitalizing the older suburb. New Brunswick: Centre for Urban Policy Research 1983. pp 227.Google Scholar

Urban renewal

772 Bertch, DF, Non profit institutions and urban revitalization, in Porter, PR & Sweet, DC eds, Rebuilding America's cities: roads to recovery. New Brunswick: Centre for Urban Policy Research 1984, 5269.Google Scholar
773 Goetze, R, Private efforts to initiate neighbourhood recovery, in Porter, PR & Sweet, DC eds, Rebuilding America's cities: roads to recovery. New Brunswick: Centre for Urban Policy Research 1984, 4251.Google Scholar
774 Jenner, M, Cairo in peril. GM (1985) 474–80.Google Scholar
775 Lee, BA, Spain, D & Umberson, DJ, Neighborhood revitalization and racial change: the case of Washington, D.C. De 22 (1985) 581602.Google ScholarPubMed
776 Leiske, J, Salvation of American cities, in Porter, PR & Sweet, DC eds, Rebuilding America's cities: roads to recovery. News Brunswick: Centre for Urban Policy Research 1984, 7192.Google Scholar
777 Minardi, B, Building on tradition [Cesena]. AR 1064 (1985) 40–2.Google Scholar
778 Porter, PR & Sweet, DC eds, Rebuilding America's cities: roads to recovery. New Brunswick: Centre for Urban Policy Research 1984. pp 255.Google Scholar
779 Rouse, JW, A case for vision, in Porter, PR & Sweet, DC eds, Rebuilding America's cities: roads to recovery. New Brunswick: Centre for Urban Policy Research 1984, 2232.Google Scholar
780 Sacco, JF, Changing strategies in urban revitalization: impacts of the community development block grant. JUA 6 (1984) 179–87.Google Scholar
781 Schill, MH & Nathan, RP, Revitalizing America's cities: neighbourhood reinvestment and displacement. Albany: State University of New York Press 1983. pp 184.Google Scholar
782 Schmandt, HJ, Wendell, GD & Tomey, EA, Federal aid to St Louis. Washington D.C: The Brookings Institution 1983.Google Scholar
783 Thomas, A, Housing and urban renewal: residential decay and revitalization in the private sector. Allen & Unwin 1986.Google Scholar
784 Thomas, JM, Redevelopment and redistribution, in Porter, PR & Sweet, DC eds, Rebuilding America's cities: roads to recovery. New Brunswick: Centre for Urban Policy Research 1984, 143159.Google Scholar

NEW AND EXPANDED TOWNS

785 Boddy, M, Sunbelt city?: a study of economic change in Britain's M4 growth corridor. Oxford: Clarendon 1986.Google Scholar
786 Christensen, CA, The American garden city and the new towns movement. Ann Arbor, MI: UMI Research Press 1986. pp x + 203, il.Google Scholar
787 Hellman, L, Routes in Cheshire [Washington]. AR 1064 (1985) 4652.Google Scholar
788 Henderson, RA, The employment performance of established manufacturing industry in Scottish new towns. Edinburgh: Scottish Economic Planning Department 1982.Google Scholar
789 Peiser, RB, Financial feasibility models in new town development: risk evaluation in the United States. TPR 55 (1984) 7590.Google Scholar
790 Steiner, F, The politics of new town planning: the Newfields, Ohio story. Athens: Ohio University Press 1981. pp 266.Google Scholar
791 Sternlieb, G & Hughes, JW, The Atlantic City gamble. Piscataway: Centre for Urban Policy Research 1983. pp. 225.Google Scholar

REGIONAL PLANNING

792 Bahl, RW ed, The fiscal outlook for cities: implications of a national urban policy. Syracuse: Syracuse University Press 1978.Google Scholar
793 Jackson, KT, The capital of capitalism: the New York metropolitan region, 1890–1940, in Sutcliffe, A ed, Metropolis 1890–1940. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 1984, 319353.Google Scholar
794 Luckingham, B, The American southwest: an urban view. WHQ 15 (1984) 261–80.Google Scholar
795 Sawers, L & Williams, TK eds, Sunbelt/Snowbelt: urban development and regional restructuring. New York: Oxford University Press 1984. pp 431.Google Scholar
796 Zovang, G, Structural change in a system of urban places: the 20th century evolution of Hungary's urban settlement network. ReS 20 (1986) 4772.Google Scholar

K URBAN CULTURE: RESEARCH METHODS, AIDS AND MATERIALS

797 Rowat, DC ed, Urban politics in Ottawa—Carleton: research essays. Ottawa: Carleton University 1983. pp 230.Google Scholar

Theory

798 Morse, RM, Peripheral cities as cultural arenas: Russia, Austria, Latin America. JUH 10 (1984) 423–52.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

URBAN CULTURE AND ENTERTAINMENT: Medieval and early modern

799 Sucks, DH, The demise of the martyrs: the feasts of St Clement and St Katherine in Bristol. SH 11 (1986) 141–96.Google Scholar

Modern

800 Blau, JR, The elite arts, more or less de rigeur: A comparative analysis of metropolitan culture. SF 64 (1986) 875905.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
801 Brown, A, Platonism in fifteenth-century Florence and its contribution to early modern political thought. JMH 58 (1986) 383413.Google Scholar
802 Morse, RM ‘Peripheral’ cities as cultural arenas (Russia, Austria, Latin America). JUH 10 (1984) 423–52.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
803 Siegel, JE, Bohemian Paris: culture, politics, and the boundaries of bourgeois life, 1830–1930. New York: Viking 1986.Google Scholar

Recreation

804 Irving, JA, The public in your woods: an owner's guide to managing urban fringe woodland for recreation. Chichester: Packard 1985.Google Scholar

Theatre

805 Thomas, LR, Richard II visits the Queen City. CinHSB 44 (1986) 3744.Google Scholar

Cinema

806 Richards, J, The age of the dream palace: cinema and society in Britain, 1930–1939. Routledge & Kegan Paul 1984. pp ix + 374, il.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

FINE ARTS

807 Durrell, J, Centennial of the dedication of the Cincinnati Art Museum's original building, May 17 1886. CinHSB 44 (1986) 31–6.Google Scholar
808 Humfrey, P & Mackenney, R, The Venetian trade guilds as patrons of art in the renaissance. BurM 998 (1986) 317–30.Google Scholar

Painting

809 Fink, LM, Rembrandt Peale in Paris. PenMHB 110 (110 (1986) 91110.Google Scholar
810 Folgarait, L, Murals and marginality in Mexico City: the case of Tepito Arte Aca. ArtH 9 (1986) 5572.Google Scholar

Other arts

811 Kissell, SS, Conservative Cincinnati and its outspoken women writers. CinHSB 44 (1986) 2030.Google Scholar
812 Lockwood, L, Music in renaissance Ferrara, 1400–1505. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard UP 1984.Google Scholar
813 Thomas, LR & Wallace, HL, The Cincinnati symphony orchestra: rise and fall and rebirth: 1895–1909. CinHSB 42 (1987) 1524.Google Scholar

EXCHANGE OF INFORMATION: Newspapers

814 Nord, DP, The public community: the urbanization of journalism in Chicago. JUH 11 (1985) 411–42.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

Libraries

815 Harris, E, Such splendid ease: the New York public library on its 75th anniversary. CL 1986 1192–3.Google Scholar
816 Pearce, BL, Free for all: the public library movement in Twickenham. Borough of Twickenham local history society 1985.Google Scholar

EDUCATION

817 Anglin, JP, The schools of defense in Elizabethan London. RQ (1984) 27 393410.Google Scholar
818 Astin, B, Schools for action: a study of community work roles in the Barton schools campaign. CDJ 19 (1984) 225–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
819 Burney, JM, Student organization in nineteenth century France: the example of Toulouse. HEdQ 25 (1985) 303–24.Google Scholar
820 Bush, L, Urban schooling: theory and practice. Holt 1985.Google Scholar
821 Cohen, RD, The dilemma of school integration in the North: Gary, Indiana, 1945–1960. InMH 82 (1986) 161–84.Google Scholar
822 Dixon, C, The institute: a personal account of the history of the University of London Institute of Education, 1932–1972. The Institute 1986.Google Scholar
823 Ellis, A, Educating our masters: influences on the growth of literacy in Victorian working class children. Aldershot: Gower 1985. pp vii + 209.Google Scholar
824 Harris, CV, Stability and change in discrimination against Black public schools: Birmingham, Alabama, 1871–1931. JSH 51 (1985) 375416.Google Scholar
825 Marsh, N, The history of Queen Elizabeth College: one hundred years of women's university education in Kensington [London]. Kings College London 1986.Google Scholar
826 Moss, G, From palace to college: an illustrated account of Queen Mary College. The College 1985.Google Scholar
827 Perlmann, J, Who stayed in school? Social structure and academic achievement in the determination of enrollment patterns, Providence, Rhode Island, 1880–1925. JAM 72 (1985) 588614.Google Scholar
828 Entry deleted.Google Scholar
829 Perko, FM, To enlighten the rising generation: school formation in Cincinnati, 1821–1836. CinHSB 43 (1985) 3348.Google Scholar
830 Schutte, AJ, Teaching adults to read in sixteenth century Venice: Giovanni Antonio Tagliente's Libro Maistrevole. SCJ 17 (1986) 316.Google Scholar
831 Sheehan, JB, The Boston school integration dispute: social change and legal manoeuvres. New York: Columbia University Press 1984.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
832 Weis, L, Between two worlds: Black students in an urban community college. Boston: Routledge & Kegan Paul 1985.Google Scholar

URBAN INFLUENCE ON RURAL AREAS

833 Fitch, N, Les petits parisiens en province: the silent revolution in the Allier, 1860–1900. [Paris] JFH 11 (1986) 131–55.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

X ATTITUDES TO CITIES ATTITUDES TO CITIES: Medieval and early modern

834 Kern, G, The idea of the city in the age of Shakespeare. Athens, Ga.: U of Georgia P 1985.Google Scholar
835 Machor, JL, The urban idyll of the new republic: moral geography and the mythic hero of Franklin's autobiography. PenMHB 110 (1986) 219–36.Google Scholar

Modern

836 Blumin, SM, Explaining the new metropolis: perception, depiction, and analysis in mid-nineteenth-century New York City. JUH 11 (1984) 938.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
837 Cortada, JW ed, A city in war: American views on Barcelona and the Spanish Civil War, 1936–1939. Wilmington: Scholarly Resources 1985. pp xxix + 224, il.Google Scholar
838 Lees, A, Cities perceived: urban society in European and American thought, 1820–1940. New York: Columbia UP 1985. pp vi + 360, il.Google Scholar
839 Tolzmann, DH, The German image of Cincinnati before 1830. CinHSB 42 (1984) 31–9.Google Scholar

POPULAR ATTITUDES

840 Harvey, D, Consciousness and the urban experience. Oxford: Blackwell 1985.Google Scholar
841 Hummon, DM, Urban views: popular perspectives on city life. UL 15 (1986) 336.Google Scholar

VIEWS OF THE CITY IN LITERATURE, GRAPHIC AND DRAMATIC ART

842 Timms, E & Kelley, D, The unreal city: images of urban experience in the early twentieth century. New York: St Martin's 1985.Google Scholar
843 Beck, HC, Tales and towns of northern New Jersey. New Brunswick: Rutgers UP, 1984, il.Google Scholar
844 Boutros, D, The west illustrated: Meyer's views of Missouri river towns. MisHR 80 (1986) 304–20.Google Scholar
845 Kagan, RL, Phillip II and the art of the city scape. JInH 17 (1986) 115–36.Google Scholar
846 Smith, CS, Chicago and the literary imagination, 1880–1920. Chicago: U Chicago P 1984. pp xiv + 232.Google Scholar
847 Sollors, W, Emil Klauprecht's ‘Cincinnati’, Oder Geheimnisse Des Westens' and the beginnings of urban realism in America. CinHSB 42 (1984) 40–8.Google Scholar
848 Trachtenberg's eye. JUH 10 (1984) 453–64.Google Scholar