Exam 1: Introduction to Experiencing Cities
Exam 1: Introduction to Experiencing Cities51 Questions
Exam 2: The Emergence of Cities37 Questions
Exam 3: The Industrial Revolution and the Rise of Urban Sociology39 Questions
Exam 4: Chicago School: Urbanism and Urban Ecology40 Questions
Exam 5: Urban Planning43 Questions
Exam 6: Urban Political Economy, the New Urban Sociology, and the Power of Place56 Questions
Exam 7: City Imagery47 Questions
Exam 8: The Skyscraper As Icon40 Questions
Exam 9: Experiencing Strangers and the Quest for Public Order63 Questions
Exam 10: Seeing Disorder and the Ecology of Fear60 Questions
Exam 11: Urban Communities and Social Policies84 Questions
Exam 12: Families, Gender, and Singles in the City63 Questions
Exam 13: The Consumer City: Shopping and Sports81 Questions
Exam 14: American and Global Suburbanization Patterns67 Questions
Exam 15: Social Capital and the Resilience of Cities59 Questions
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Most population growth will occur in the poorest and least developed countries.
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(True/False)
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True
The UN predicts that by 2050 the world's urban population will be the same size as the entire world's population back in 2004.
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True
According to Kingsley Davis, cities and urbanization…
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D
A microlevel approach to urban living is needed, because macrolevel approaches ignore…
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What is one of the most common consequences of rapid population growth in developing countries?
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Hutter grew up in a neighborhood that was spatially segregated, but culturally, institutionally, and socially integrated.
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Explain how symbolic interactionism can contribute to the study of urban sociology.Be sure to consider the work of Thomas, Park, Strauss, and Lofland.
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Elijah Anderson, in his essay "Cosmopolitan Canopy," observed that our contemporary diversity is a consequence of…
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Barbara Boyle Torrey notes that the most striking examples of the ongoing urbanization of the world are the…
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The statement, "If men define situations as real, they are real in their consequences," refers to…
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Perry, Abbott, and Hutter developed the urban imagery approach because they felt that too few symbolic interactionists had investigated…
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Which of the following is NOT one of Blumer's basic premises of symbolic interactionism?
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Symbolic interactionism begins with the basic premise that…
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An urban political economist would understand cities and urban life by focusing on…
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Hutter explains two analytical interests that symbolic interactionists have had in understanding cities, and he suggests a third approach.What are these approaches?
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Thomas argues that people respond to the meaning a situation has for them, not just to the objective features of a situation.
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The importance of cities is reflected in Mumford's idea that cities…
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The importance of Thomas and Znaneicki's study The Polish Peasant, is that it showed how individuals' understanding of their lives and circumstances could enable them to…
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Symbolic interactionists believe that any environmental space, whether a building, a street, or a city, should be seen in terms of its…
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Strauss argues that one invariant characteristic of city life is that people "see" the city by using certain stylized and symbolic objects.He further argues that people's images of these objects are due to the…
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