Pittsburgh and the Appalachians: Cultural and Natural Resources in a Postindustrial Age

Author:   Joseph L. Scarpaci ,  Kevin J. Patrick ,  Timothy G. Anderson ,  Nancy R. Bain
Publisher:   University of Pittsburgh Press
ISBN:  

9780822942825


Pages:   280
Publication Date:   30 June 2006
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Pittsburgh and the Appalachians: Cultural and Natural Resources in a Postindustrial Age


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Author:   Joseph L. Scarpaci ,  Kevin J. Patrick ,  Timothy G. Anderson ,  Nancy R. Bain
Publisher:   University of Pittsburgh Press
Imprint:   University of Pittsburgh Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.50cm , Height: 2.40cm , Length: 23.50cm
Weight:   0.576kg
ISBN:  

9780822942825


ISBN 10:   0822942828
Pages:   280
Publication Date:   30 June 2006
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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"""Pittsburgh and the Appalachians profiles the city and its hinterland to assess what they have, and what they will need, to achieve a fresh and vigorous future. Once gateway to the West, then keystone city for American heavy industry, Pittsburgh, with its region, became a cruel postindustrial economic and environmental joke. Yet when viewed in contemporary perspective, unique urban and regional characteristics of people and place, from creative forces at the core to recreational resources across the region, provide energy, opportunity, and possibility. Scholarly and readable, this book captures Pittsburgh's promise and serves as a model for how geographers can look at and think about effects of urban, metropolitan, and regional restructuring and reshuffling in the twenty-first century."" --Joseph S. Wood, University of Southern Maine "" An excellent summary and analysis of issues that continue to shape the landscape of Pittsburgh and its hinterland. A concise, readable book."" --Journal of Regional Science x ""This volume will be of interest to scholars and a wider readesrhip interested in the region and/or in the challenges of the shifting economic and social realities of the eraly 21st century. Recommended."" --Choice Pittsburgh and the Appalachians profiles the city and its hinterland to assess what they have, and what they will need, to achieve a fresh and vigorous future. Once gateway to the West, then keystone city for American heavy industry, Pittsburgh, with its region, became a cruel postindustrial economic and environmental joke. Yet when viewed in contemporary perspective, unique urban and regional characteristics of people and place, from creative forces at the core to recreational resources across the region, provide energy, opportunity, and possibility. Scholarly and readable, this book captures Pittsburgh's promise and serves as a model for how geographers can look at and think about effects of urban, metropolitan, and regional restructuring and reshuffling in the twenty-first century.-- ""Joseph S. Wood, University of Southern Maine"" During the industrial age, coal was king, steel and other mills dominated the economic landscape, and immigrants created distinctive neighborhoods. Pittsburgh and the Appalachians analyzes the transition to the landscape of the information age, facilitated by planning, community organizations, and private-public partnerships, where creative people are the most important factor of production and universities and cultural and environmental resources are critical to growth.-- ""Ruth I. Shirey, Indiana University of Pennsylvania"" This volume will be of interest to scholars and a wider readesrhip interested in the region and/or in the challenges of the shifting economic and social realities of the eraly 21st century. Recommended.-- ""Choice"""


Pittsburgh and the Appalachians profiles the city and its hinterland to assess what they have, and what they will need, to achieve a fresh and vigorous future. Once gateway to the West, then keystone city for American heavy industry, Pittsburgh, with its region, became a cruel postindustrial economic and environmental joke. Yet when viewed in contemporary perspective, unique urban and regional characteristics of people and place, from creative forces at the core to recreational resources across the region, provide energy, opportunity, and possibility. Scholarly and readable, this book captures Pittsburgh's promise and serves as a model for how geographers can look at and think about effects of urban, metropolitan, and regional restructuring and reshuffling in the twenty-first century. --Joseph S. Wood, University of Southern Maine An excellent summary and analysis of issues that continue to shape the landscape of Pittsburgh and its hinterland. A concise, readable book. --Journal of Regional Science x This volume will be of interest to scholars and a wider readesrhip interested in the region and/or in the challenges of the shifting economic and social realities of the eraly 21st century. Recommended. --Choice Pittsburgh and the Appalachians profiles the city and its hinterland to assess what they have, and what they will need, to achieve a fresh and vigorous future. Once gateway to the West, then keystone city for American heavy industry, Pittsburgh, with its region, became a cruel postindustrial economic and environmental joke. Yet when viewed in contemporary perspective, unique urban and regional characteristics of people and place, from creative forces at the core to recreational resources across the region, provide energy, opportunity, and possibility. Scholarly and readable, this book captures Pittsburgh's promise and serves as a model for how geographers can look at and think about effects of urban, metropolitan, and regional restructuring and reshuffling in the twenty-first century. --Joseph S. Wood, University of Southern Maine This volume will be of interest to scholars and a wider readesrhip interested in the region and/or in the challenges of the shifting economic and social realities of the eraly 21st century. Recommended. --Choice An excellent summary and analysis of issues that continue to shape the landscape of Pittsburgh and its hinterland. A concise, readable book. --Journal of Regional Science x Pittsburgh and the Appalachians profiles the city and its hinterland to assess what they have, and what they will need, to achieve a fresh and vigorous future. Once gateway to the West, then keystone city for American heavy industry, Pittsburgh, with its region, became a cruel postindustrial economic and environmental joke. Yet when viewed in contemporary perspective, unique urban and regional characteristics of people and place, from creative forces at the core to recreational resources across the region, provide energy, opportunity, and possibility. Scholarly and readable, this book captures Pittsburgh's promise and serves as a model for how geographers can look at and think about effects of urban, metropolitan, and regional restructuring and reshuffling in the twenty-first century. --Joseph S. Wood, University of Southern Maine During the industrial age, coal was king, steel and other mills dominated the economic landscape, and immigrants created distinctive neighborhoods. Pittsburgh and the Appalachians analyzes the transition to the landscape of the information age, facilitated by planning, community organizations, and private-public partnerships, where creative people are the most important factor of production and universities and cultural and environmental resources are critical to growth. --Ruth I. Shirey, Indiana University of Pennsylvania This volume will be of interest to scholars and a wider readesrhip interested in the region and/or in the challenges of the shifting economic and social realities of the eraly 21st century. Recommended. --Choice During the industrial age, coal was king, steel and other mills dominated the economic landscape, and immigrants created distinctive neighborhoods. < I> Pittsburgh and the Appalachians< /I> analyzes the transition to the landscape of the information age, facilitated by planning, community organizations, and private-public partnerships, where creative people are the most important factor of production and universities and cultural and environmental resources are critical to growth. --Ruth I. Shirey, Indiana University of Pennsylvania During the industrial age, coal was king, steel and other mills dominated the economic landscape, and immigrants created distinctive neighborhoods. Pittsburgh and the Appalachians analyzes the transition to the landscape of the information age, facilitated by planning, community organizations, and private-public partnerships, where creative people are the most important factor of production and universities and cultural and environmental resources are critical to growth. --Ruth I. Shirey, Indiana University of Pennsylvania


Pittsburgh and the Appalachians profiles the city and its hinterland to assess what they have, and what they will need, to achieve a fresh and vigorous future. Once gateway to the West, then keystone city for American heavy industry, Pittsburgh, with its region, became a cruel postindustrial economic and environmental joke. Yet when viewed in contemporary perspective, unique urban and regional characteristics of people and place, from creative forces at the core to recreational resources across the region, provide energy, opportunity, and possibility. Scholarly and readable, this book captures Pittsburgh's promise and serves as a model for how geographers can look at and think about effects of urban, metropolitan, and regional restructuring and reshuffling in the twenty-first century. <br> --Joseph S. Wood, University of Southern Maine


Pittsburgh and the Appalachians profiles the city and its hinterland to assess what they have, and what they will need, to achieve a fresh and vigorous future. Once gateway to the West, then keystone city for American heavy industry, Pittsburgh, with its region, became a cruel postindustrial economic and environmental joke. Yet when viewed in contemporary perspective, unique urban and regional characteristics of people and place, from creative forces at the core to recreational resources across the region, provide energy, opportunity, and possibility. Scholarly and readable, this book captures Pittsburgh's promise and serves as a model for how geographers can look at and think about effects of urban, metropolitan, and regional restructuring and reshuffling in the twenty-first century. --Joseph S. Wood, University of Southern Maine


Author Information

Joseph L. Scarpaci is professor of geography at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University and author of Barrios and Plazas: Heritage Tourism and Globalization in the Spanish Amiercan Centro Histórico.

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