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This book examines how privatization has transformed cities,
particularly through the role of Business Improvement Districts
(BIDs) in the revitalization of America's downtown. These
public-private partnerships between property owners and municipal
government have developed retail strips across the United States
into lifestyle and commercial hubs. BIDs are non-profit community
organizations with the public power to tax and spend on services in
their districts, but they are unelected bodies often operating in
the shadows of local government. They work as agents of economic
development, but are they democratic? What can we learn from BIDs
about the accountability of public-private partnerships, and how
they impact our lives as citizens? Unger explores these questions
of local democracy and urban political economy in this age of
rampant privatization and the reinvention of neighborhoods.
This book addresses what is perhaps the most salient issue in
American politics today: the decline of the middle class. It is
this single issue that drove the outlier presidential candidates
Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump to national prominence, and
undergirded the electoral victory of Donald Trump. While there are
other longer studies exploring in detail the structural forces,
most prominently the loss of manufacturing in the US, that have
caused the contraction of the middle class, none offer in shorter
form practical policy solutions directly geared towards
practitioners in government and the private sector. This work
focuses specifically on combining both an academic analysis of the
subject combined with detailed policy recommendations. These
recommendations are designed to be implemented; they take into
account the latest set of real world political variables such as
actual current legislative and institutional agendas currently in
play on the federal and local levels.
This book examines how privatization has transformed cities,
particularly through the role of Business Improvement Districts
(BIDs) in the revitalization of America's downtown. These
public-private partnerships between property owners and municipal
government have developed retail strips across the United States
into lifestyle and commercial hubs. BIDs are non-profit community
organizations with the public power to tax and spend on services in
their districts, but they are unelected bodies often operating in
the shadows of local government. They work as agents of economic
development, but are they democratic? What can we learn from BIDs
about the accountability of public-private partnerships, and how
they impact our lives as citizens? Unger explores these questions
of local democracy and urban political economy in this age of
rampant privatization and the reinvention of neighborhoods.
A Jewish Public Theology draws from Halakhah, Jewish law, to
address some of the most searing current policy issues. Abraham
Unger examines how Jewish tradition speaks to globalization and its
attendant political and economic cleavages. Classical Jewish
thought sits on a perch outside of the defining parameters of the
global political conversation and as such cannot be pigeon holed as
populist, leftist, or rightist. Judaism was born in antiquity and
therefore predates by millennia these current ideological biases.
That intellectual distance, both due to the long arc of Jewish
history, and outsider minority status as a tradition, allows for a
critical distance. Unger explores how the Jewish tradition compels
the living out of a public policy framework through the forging of
equitable communities using arguments that go beyond political
orthodoxies. In this socially fragile era, the possibility of that
message offers a hopeful discourse of significant possibility for
all humankind.
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