Dublin (Belhaven World Cities S.) - Hardcover

MacLaren, Andrew

 
9781852931667: Dublin (Belhaven World Cities S.)

Synopsis

Dublin, the Georgian architectural gem, and Dubliners, the people immortalised by Joyce and Behan, share a highly romantic and idealised international image. The aim of this book is to examine through a comprehensive urban geography of the city how far the stereotypical picture of Dublin life and landscape mesh with the real facts of a modern industrial and political capital, absolutely dominating in size and influence a small country on the edge of the European Community. Andrew MacLaran begins his study by sketching Dublin's historical roots from Norse foundations through Irish and English influences to the emergent capital of an independent Ireland. He then examines the evolution of the urban economy since 1945 and political and land development issues. Planning within a city and national context is then studied, specifically transport and land use problems. Population, housing, environmental problems and management, and the built environment (including a detailed consideration of Dublin's incomparable architecture) are dealt with in successive chapters. The final three chapters consider the city's cultural life and the complex attitudes, experiences and contradictions that characterise the Dubliner, the relationship between ideology and the urban environment and Dublin's future as a European and world city.

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About the Author

Andrew MacLaran is Senior lecturer in the Department of Geography, and Joint Director of the Centre for Urban and Regional Studies at Trinity College, Dublin. His research interests include the social consequences of economic restructuring in urban areas and the impact of the property development industry on the urban environment.

From the Inside Flap

World Cities Series edited by R. J. Johnston, University of Essex and P.L. Knox, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Dublin, the Georgian architectural gem, and Dubliners, the people immortalised by Joyce and Behan, share a highly romantic and idealised international image. The aim of this book is to examine through a comprehensive urban geography of the city how far the stereo–typical picture of Dublin life and landscape mesh with the real facts of a modern industrial and political capital, dominating in size and influence a small country on the edge of the European Community. Andrew MacLaran begins his study by sketching Dublin s historical roots from Norse foundations through Irish and English influences to the emergent capital of an independent Ireland. He then examines the evolution of the urban economy since 1945 and analyses the Political and Planning contexts within which recent developments have taken place. Attention then focuses on the city s Population, its youthful age–structure and its social composition and then deals in some depth with the Housing System. The book concludes with an examination of the emergence of serious Inner–City problems resulting from economic restructuring. This important book will be widely read as the classic, authoritative study of a remarkable city. Contents

  1. Introduction
  2. The origins and growth of Dublin
  3. The economy of Dublin
  4. Politics and government
  5. Planning the city
  6. Strategic planning of land–use and transportation
  7. Creating the urban landscape
  8. The population of Dublin
  9. The residential environment
  10. Inner–city problems and regeneration
  11. Epilogue

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Other Popular Editions of the Same Title

9780471947110: Dublin: The Shaping of a Capital (World Cities Series)

Featured Edition

ISBN 10:  0471947113 ISBN 13:  9780471947110
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons, 1993
Softcover