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Cover for 9780801838019 Cover for 9780801838026 Cover for 9780201422542 Cover for 9780415365734 Cover for 9780415365741 Cover for 9783631588550 Cover for 9780495812227 Cover for 9780813347370 Cover for 9780813347394 Cover for 9780201422542 Cover for 9781608196760 Cover for 9781465402493 Cover for 9781781954805 Cover for 9781781954812 Cover for 9780674072947 Cover for 9780415738897 Cover for 9780415738903 Cover for 9780393082876 Cover for 9780393349788 Cover for 9780199859528 Cover for 9780199859542 Cover for 9781472434791 Cover for 9780130884169 Cover for 9780131113954 Cover for 9780132260404 Cover for 9780137363230 Cover for 9780133869804 Cover for 9780205206377 Cover for 9780205645336 Cover for 9780205902583 Cover for 9780199589531 Cover for 9780198779377
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Exploring the "morphogenesis" of the city in Western civilization, this new edition contains updated material, a new introduction, and additional illustrations.

Hardcover:

9780801838019 | Rev sub edition (Johns Hopkins Univ Pr, June 1, 1990), cover price $75.00 | About this edition: Exploring the "morphogenesis" of the city in Western civilization, this new edition contains updated material, a new introduction, and additional illustrations.

Paperback:

9780801838026 | Johns Hopkins Univ Pr, August 1, 1990, cover price $36.00

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Hardcover:

9780201422542 | Signed edition (Addison-Wesley, June 1, 1999), cover price $88.67 | also contains City: A Guidebook for the Urban Age

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Hardcover:

9780415365734 | Routledge, January 29, 2008, cover price $180.00

Paperback:

9780415365741 | Routledge, January 30, 2008, cover price $55.95

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Hardcover:

9780495812227, titled "Cities, Change, and Conflict: A Political Economy of Urban Life" | 4th edition (Wadsworth Pub Co, March 26, 2010), cover price $267.95

By Zack Mclaughlin (illustrator) and Jim Pipe

Hardcover:

9780756682750 | Dk Pub, July 18, 2011, cover price $18.99

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Product Description: Places of Encounter provides a place-based approach to world history, focusing on specific locations at critical moments when human history was transformed as a result of encounters—physical, political, cultural, intellectual, and religious...read more

Paperback:

9780813347394 | 1 edition (Westview Pr, March 27, 2012), cover price $45.00 | About this edition: Places of Encounter provides a place-based approach to world history, focusing on specific locations at critical moments when human history was transformed as a result of encounters—physical, political, cultural, intellectual, and religious.

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Product Description: For the first time in the history of our planet, more than half the population-3.3 billion people-is now living in cities. City is the ultimate guidebook to our urban centers-the signature unit of human civilization. With erudite prose and carefully chosen illustrations, this unique work of metatourism explores what cities are and how they work...read more

Hardcover:

9781608196760 | Bloomsbury Pub Plc USA, June 19, 2012, cover price $40.00 | About this edition: For the first time in the history of our planet, more than half the population-3.
9780201422542, titled "College Algebra Math Tutor Center National" | Signed edition (Addison-Wesley, June 1, 1999), cover price $88.67 | also contains College Algebra Math Tutor Center National

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By Steve Noon (illustrator)

Hardcover:

9781465402493 | Dk Pub, February 18, 2013, cover price $17.99

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'Peter J. Taylor has produced a sweeping, empirically grounded, defense of cities as fundamental building blocks of long-term, large scale social structures; a way of freeing social science from state-centric bias; and indeed, mankind's hope. However, the single greatest strength of this complex, seductive, argument is the insistence on treating cities relationally, as process. Here the key to understanding the significance of cities is by studying them in terms of the dynamic networks they form and in their relations to states.'- Richard E. Lee, Binghamton University, US'The founding father of the famous Globalization and World Cities Research Network and think-tank on worldwide links between cities presents this fascinating overview on cities in geohistory. By moving cities to the centre stage, Peter Taylor proposes that concern for states tell only part of the macro-social story of humanity. Cities have been, and are, the engines of innovation. This impressive new book provides new insights into why cities succeed or fail. The book is in the class with broadminded presentations like Jared Diamond's book Guns, Germs and Steel.'- Christian Matthiessen, University of Copenhagen, Denmark and President, International Geographical Union s Commission on Urban Geography'This is a 'big' book by Peter Taylor. It tells of the extraordinary world-making powers of cities across the ages, it explains why a state-centric social science has constrained recognition of these powers over the last two centuries, and it outlines a new 'indisciplinarity' to help us make sense of a human condition increasingly forged out of the urban. Anyone troubled by the social sciences as we know them, ought to read this book.'- Ash Amin, Cambridge University, UK and author, Land of StrangersAccepting that cities are extraordinary, this book provides an original city-centred narrative of human creativity, past, present and future.In this innovative, ambitious and wide-ranging book, Peter Taylor demonstrates that cities are the epicenters of human advancement. In exploring cities as sites through which economies flourish, by harnessing the creative potential of myriad communication networks, the author considers cities from varying temporal and spatial perspectives. Four stories of cities are told: the origins of city networks; the domination of cities by world-empires; the genesis of a singular modern creative interval in which innovation culminates in today s globalised cities; and finally, the need for cities to act as centres for human creativity to produce a more resilient global society in the current crisis century.Providing a long-term view through which to consider the role of cities in attending to incipient crises of the twenty-first century, this closely argued thesis will prove essential for students and scholars of urban studies, geography and sociology, and all those with a professional interest in, or personal fascination for, cities.Contents: Preface Part I: Setting Down and Setting Up 1. A Cities' Perspective 2. Conceptual Toolkits Part II: Narrative I: Beginning Conjectures 3. City and State Beginnings: Western Asia's Great Creative Interlude 4. Geographies of Beginning Creative Interludes Part III: Narrative II: World-systems 5. Normal History 6. Making the Modern World-system: Western Europe's Great Creative Interlude Part IV: Narrative III: Prospective Conjectures - Where Are We and Where Are We Going? 7. Working in an Urban World 8. Towards Green Networks of Cities for the Twenty-first Century References Index

Hardcover:

9781781954805 | Edward Elgar Pub, April 13, 2013, cover price $168.00 | About this edition: 'Peter J.

Paperback:

9781781954812 | Reprint edition (Edward Elgar Pub, April 28, 2014), cover price $55.00

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By Marc LePain (trans)

Hardcover:

9780674072947 | 1 edition (Harvard Univ Pr, September 23, 2013), cover price $42.00

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People have designed cities long before there were urban designers. In Shapers of Urban Form, Peter Larkham and Michael Conzen have commissioned new scholarship on the forces, people, and institutions that have shaped cities from the Middle Ages to the present day. Larkham and Conzen collect new essays in "urban morphology," the people-centered predecessor to contemporary theories of top-down urban design. Shapers of Urban Form focuses on the social processes that create patterns of urban forms in four discrete periods: Pre-modern, early modern, industrial-era and postmodern development. Featuring studies of English, American, Western and Eastern European, and New Zealand urban history and urban form, this collection is invaluable to scholars of urban design and town planning, as well as urban and economic historians.
By Michael P. Conzen (editor) and Peter J. Larkham (editor)

Hardcover:

9780415738897 | Routledge, June 20, 2014, cover price $180.00 | About this edition: People have designed cities long before there were urban designers.

Paperback:

9780415738903 | Routledge, August 25, 2014, cover price $59.95

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Hardcover:

9780393082876 | W W Norton & Co Inc, October 7, 2013, cover price $28.95

Paperback:

9780393349788 | Reprint edition (W W Norton & Co Inc, October 6, 2014), cover price $17.95

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The City: A World History tells the story of the rise and development of urban centers from ancient times to the twenty-first century. It begins with the establishment of the first cities in the Near East in the fourth millennium BCE, and goes on to examine urban growth in the Indus River Valley in India, as well as Egypt and areas that bordered the Mediterranean Sea. Athens, Alexandria, and Rome stand out both politically and culturally. With the fall of the Roman Empire in the West, European cities entered into a long period of waning and deterioration. But elsewhere, great cities-among them, Constantinople, Baghdad, Chang'an, and Tenochtitlán-thrived. In the late Middle Ages and the Early Modern period, urban growth resumed in Europe, giving rise to cities like Florence, Paris, and London. This urban growth also accelerated in parts of the world that came under European control, such as Philadelphia in the nascent United States. As the Industrial Revolution swept through in the nineteenth century, cities grew rapidly. Their expansion resulted in a slew of social problems and political disruptions, but it was accompanied by impressive measures designed to improve urban life. Meanwhile, colonial cities bore the imprint of European imperialism. Finally, the book turns to the years since 1914, guided by a few themes: the impact of war and revolution; urban reconstruction after 1945; migration out of many cities in the United States into growing suburbs; and the explosive growth of "megacities" in the developing world.

Hardcover:

9780199859528 | Oxford Univ Pr on Demand, October 7, 2015, cover price $74.00

Paperback:

9780199859542 | Oxford Univ Pr, October 7, 2015, cover price $19.95 | About this edition: The City: A World History tells the story of the rise and development of urban centers from ancient times to the twenty-first century.

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Product Description: Drawing on a body of research covering primarily Europe and the Americas, but stretching also to Asia and Africa, from the mid-eighteenth century to the present, this book explores the methodological and heuristic implications of studying cities in relation to one another...read more
By Rebecca Madgin (editor)

Hardcover:

9781472434791 | Ashgate Pub Co, February 8, 2016, cover price $124.95 | About this edition: Drawing on a body of research covering primarily Europe and the Americas, but stretching also to Asia and Africa, from the mid-eighteenth century to the present, this book explores the methodological and heuristic implications of studying cities in relation to one another.

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Hardcover:

9780132260404 | 4th edition (Prentice Hall, May 4, 2006), cover price $119.80
9780131113954 | 3 sub edition (Prentice Hall, June 1, 2003), cover price $96.20
9780130884169 | 2nd edition (Prentice Hall, June 1, 2000), cover price $72.00
9780137363230 | Prentice Hall, May 1, 1998, cover price $63.00 | also contains Counseling and Spirituality: Integrating Spiritual and Clinical Orientations

Paperback:

9780133869804 | 7 edition (Prentice Hall, January 16, 2016), cover price $166.80
9780205206377 | 6 edition (Prentice Hall, August 2, 2012), cover price $166.80
9780205902583 | 6 pck pap/ edition (Prentice Hall, July 25, 2012), cover price $175.47
9780205741045 | Gardners Books, June 28, 2009, cover price $53.35
9780205645336 | 5th edition (Prentice Hall, May 29, 2009), cover price $138.80

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In 2008 for the first time the majority of the planet's inhabitants lived in cities and towns. Becoming globally urban has been one of mankind's greatest collective achievements over time, and raises many questions. How did global city systems evolve and interact in the past? How have historic urban patterns impacted on those of the contemporary world? And what were the key drivers in the roller-coaster of urban change over the millennia - market forces such as trade and industry, rulers and governments, competition and collaboration between cities, or the urban environment and demographic forces? This pioneering comparative work by leading scholars drawn from a range of disciplines offers the first detailed comparative study of urban development from ancient times to the present day. The Oxford Handbook of Cities in World History explores not only the main trends in the growth of cities and towns across the world - in Asia and the Middle East, Europe, Africa, and the Americas - and the different types of cities from great metropolitan centres to suburbs, colonial cities, and market towns, but also many of the essential themes in the making and remaking of the urban world: the role of power, economic development, migration, social inequality, environmental challenge and the urban response, religion and representation, cinema, and urban creativity. Split into three parts covering Ancient cities, the medieval and early-modern period, and the modern and contemporary era, it begins with an introduction by the editor identifying the importance and challenges of research on cities in world history, as well as the crucial outlines of urban development since the earliest cities in ancient Mesopotamia to the present.
By Peter Clark (editor)

Hardcover:

9780199589531 | Oxford Univ Pr, April 6, 2013, cover price $175.00 | About this edition: In 2008 for the first time the majority of the planet's inhabitants lived in cities and towns.

Paperback:

9780198779377 | Oxford Univ Pr, July 5, 2016, cover price $55.00

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