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Business & Economics Urban & Regional

Cities Matter

A Montrealer's Ode to Jane Jacobs, Economist

by (author) Charles-Albert Ramsay

Publisher
Baraka Books
Initial publish date
Oct 2022
Category
Urban & Regional, Urban, City Planning & Urban Development
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9781771863049
    Publish Date
    Oct 2022
    List Price
    $24.95

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Description

People ask themselves why cities exist? Can?t there be other ways of organizing life on earth? Given the climate crisis and environmental concerns, how can we justify living in cramped quarters?

Cities Matter answers those questions. There are really good reasons why cities exist. There are also really good reasons to believe that cities can help us solve the problems of our day and age.

Though Jane Jacobs is known mainly as an urbanist, Ramsay shows how important an economist she was, particularly with regards to cities and their economic relationships to nations and international trade. He has corralled much of Jane Jacobs? writings on economics, in a palatable and concise format. He also explains classical economic geography, such as central location theory, and Alfred Marshall's economies of agglomeration.

Borrowing from Jane Jacobs? approach, he proposes real-life exercises for regular people wishing to compare suburban and urban living conditions, real estate investments, or transport-cost analysis for businesses.

Since the Covid-19 pandemic began, some have predicted that cities are doomed. Will everybody continue to work from home and abandon city centres? Will the bucolic periphery take over from bustling and messy cities? Ramsay responds with a resounding NO, and posits that Jane Jacobs would too.

About the author

Contributor Notes

Charles-Albert Ramsay is a Montreal economist, popularizer, and teacher with a Master's in Economics from the Université de Sherbrooke. As a journalist for Les Affaires, and the TVA business news channel, he has reported on new business projects in cities throughout Canada and internationally. A specialist in innovation and urban economics, he has taught economics at Dawson College and Kiuna Institution in Quebec.