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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS vii
- ONE. Neighborhood Power in Twentieth- Century San Francisco 1
-
PART I: NEIGHBORHOOD POWER IN THE “WHITE MAN’S TERRITORY,” 1906–29
- TWO. Make No Big Plans: The City Beautiful Meets Improvement Clubs 33
- THREE. Neighborhood Capitalism: Urban Planning, Municipal Government, and the Mission Promotion Association 58
- FOUR. The Mission and the Spatial Imagination: Discourse, Ethnicity, and Architecture 83
-
PART II: THE NEW DEAL IN THE MISSION: REVITALIZING COMMUNITY, ERODING LOCAL POWER
- FIVE. A New Population, Not a New Public: Latino Diversity in San Francisco and the Mission District 121
- SIX. Economic Equality, Racial Erasure: The Spatial and Cultural Interventions of Federal Public Works Agencies 132
- SEVEN. “No- Lining” and Neighborhood Erasure: Washington, D.C., and Downtown San Francisco Come to the Mission 148
-
PART III: PROGRESS FOR WHOM?TRANSPORTATION PLANNING, URBAN RENEWAL, AND MULTIETHNIC COALITION BUILDING, 1945–60
- EIGHT. The Motoring Public and Neighborhood Erasure: The Culture and Practice of Postwar Transportation Planning 177
- NINE. Latino as Worker: The Changing Politics of Race in the City and the Neighborhood 211
-
PART IV: RETURN TO THE CITY WITHIN A CITY: MULTIETHNIC COALITIONS AND URBAN RENEWAL, 1961–73
- TEN. A “Salvable Neighborhood”: Urban Renewal, Model Cities, and the Rise of a Social Planning Regime 231
- ELEVEN. Who Holds Final Authority? The San Francisco Redevelopment Agency and the Mission Council on Redevelopment 258
- TWELVE. The Return to the City within a City: The Mission Coalition Organization and the Devolution of Planning Power 279
- Conclusion 311
- Acknowledgments 317
- Abbreviations 321
- Notes 325
- Index 379
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS vii
- ONE. Neighborhood Power in Twentieth- Century San Francisco 1
-
PART I: NEIGHBORHOOD POWER IN THE “WHITE MAN’S TERRITORY,” 1906–29
- TWO. Make No Big Plans: The City Beautiful Meets Improvement Clubs 33
- THREE. Neighborhood Capitalism: Urban Planning, Municipal Government, and the Mission Promotion Association 58
- FOUR. The Mission and the Spatial Imagination: Discourse, Ethnicity, and Architecture 83
-
PART II: THE NEW DEAL IN THE MISSION: REVITALIZING COMMUNITY, ERODING LOCAL POWER
- FIVE. A New Population, Not a New Public: Latino Diversity in San Francisco and the Mission District 121
- SIX. Economic Equality, Racial Erasure: The Spatial and Cultural Interventions of Federal Public Works Agencies 132
- SEVEN. “No- Lining” and Neighborhood Erasure: Washington, D.C., and Downtown San Francisco Come to the Mission 148
-
PART III: PROGRESS FOR WHOM?TRANSPORTATION PLANNING, URBAN RENEWAL, AND MULTIETHNIC COALITION BUILDING, 1945–60
- EIGHT. The Motoring Public and Neighborhood Erasure: The Culture and Practice of Postwar Transportation Planning 177
- NINE. Latino as Worker: The Changing Politics of Race in the City and the Neighborhood 211
-
PART IV: RETURN TO THE CITY WITHIN A CITY: MULTIETHNIC COALITIONS AND URBAN RENEWAL, 1961–73
- TEN. A “Salvable Neighborhood”: Urban Renewal, Model Cities, and the Rise of a Social Planning Regime 231
- ELEVEN. Who Holds Final Authority? The San Francisco Redevelopment Agency and the Mission Council on Redevelopment 258
- TWELVE. The Return to the City within a City: The Mission Coalition Organization and the Devolution of Planning Power 279
- Conclusion 311
- Acknowledgments 317
- Abbreviations 321
- Notes 325
- Index 379