Deck 8: Cities and Communities

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Question
When sociologist Barry Wellman claimed that community was neither "lost" nor "saved" but was instead "liberated," he was arguing for thinking about community strictly in terms of geography and the physical layout of neighborhoods.
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Question
Sociologists regard the growth in the number of Americans living by themselves principally as a negative trend that points to growing levels of social isolation.
Question
Jane Addams founded Hull House,the first settlement house in America,in Chicago.
Question
Redlining is the practice of identifying the homes in racially homogenous white neighborhoods that carry the largest mortgages.
Question
The social and economic integration of different groups within a city relates directly to the form and spatial layout of city neighborhoods.
Question
New Urbanists call for a return to mixed-use,walkable urban communities as a response to suburban sprawl.
Question
According to German sociologist Georg Simmel,individuals find both freedom and isolation in rural communities.
Question
Urban renewal was used in many cities to consolidate growing populations of African Americans and to reinforce racial segregation in urban neighborhoods.
Question
When a city is viewed as a growth machine,urban change is seen as driven by a powerful set of economic elites.
Question
A general critique of the urban ecology perspective is that it fails to consider the role of political and economic forces that affect the development of cities.
Question
Chicago School sociologist Ernest Burgess developed a model of urban community structure based on crime statistics.
Question
Social capital refers to the resources available to individuals through their financial reserves and investment savvy.
Question
Scholars who study intensely violent neighborhoods find that a strong sense of community cannot flourish there.
Question
During the nineteenth century,as agriculture became more mechanized,more people were drawn into rural areas than into cities.
Question
The disappearance of manufacturing jobs from central cities was a factor contributing to the transformation of vibrant neighborhoods into neighborhoods with concentrated poverty.
Question
The Fair Housing Act (1968)made discrimination in the public housing markets illegal,whereas discrimination in private housing markets was unaffected by the legislation.
Question
At present,more than half of the world's population lives in urban areas.
Question
Although scholars have shown that developers and the business community reaped most of the benefits of the urban renewal policy articulated in the 1949 Housing Act,urban renewal unequivocally improved housing for the poor in blighted neighborhoods that typically lacked social cohesion.
Question
Edge cities are suburban counterparts to the traditional downtown areas of large central cities.
Question
The dominant model of assimilation for immigrant families in America is one of upward mobility into the cultural mainstream.
Question
According to demographer Kingsley Davis,in the modern world,the process of urbanization follows a(n)__________.

A)bell-shaped curve
B)circular function
C)S curve
D)straight line
Question
Before the emergence of widespread industry,the pace of urbanization was __________.

A)virtually nonexistent
B)slow and gradual
C)level
D)rapid and steep
Question
Demographic shifts in Miami,Florida over the last 40 years show a dramatic rise in the Latino population.
Question
Our world is becoming __________.

A)decreasingly suburbanized
B)decreasingly urbanized
C)increasingly urbanized
D)increasingly conurbanized
Question
The main cause of population growth in cities in the nineteenth century was __________.

A)increasing life expectancy
B)increasing numbers of births
C)migration
D)higher wages
Question
Before industrialization,daily life for the vast majority of people focused on __________.

A)travel and trade
B)cottage industry
C)mining
D)immediate sustenance
Question
Dallas/Fort Worth is an example of an urban form known as a __________.

A)biurb
B)megaurb
C)polyurb
D)conurb
Question
Global cities are hubs of international finance and technology in a world where business activity crosses national boundaries easily.
Question
One way to demonstrate the degree to which the world has become connected is through telephone conversations rather than Internet traffic.
Question
When manufacturing jobs that once formed the base of urban labor markets began to decline rapidly,they were replaced exclusively by low-wage service-sector jobs.
Question
Cities first arose over __________ years ago.

A)5,000
B)7,500
C)8,500
D)10,000
Question
In the twentieth century,the pace of suburbanization quickened because of all the following EXCEPT __________.

A)government subsidies for cars
B)government subsidies for home ownership
C)government subsidies for highway construction
D)government subsidies for gentrification
Question
__________ was the first nation to industrialize.

A)Britain
B)China
C)Germany
D)The United States
Question
How does the U.S.Census Bureau classify urban areas?

A)as areas with a population density of at least 1,000 people per square mile
B)as areas with a population density of at least 1,000 people per square mile,plus all surrounding areas that have an overall density of at least 500 people per square mile
C)as areas with a population density of at least 5,000 people per square mile
D)as areas with a population density of at least 5,000 people per square mile,plus all surrounding areas that have an overall density of at least 500 people per square mile
Question
The U.S.Census Bureau's definition of urban areas is based on __________.

A)density
B)heterogeneity
C)remote sensing
D)UN estimates
Question
What is the Great Migration?

A)the movement of African Americans from the rural South to industrial cities of the North
B)the movement of Latinos from Central and South America to the American Southwest
C)the movement of Mormons to present-day Utah
D)the movement of European Jews to Palestine in the 1920s
Question
After cities reach their carrying capacity,the demand for labor __________ and the cost of urban space __________.

A)escalates;subsides
B)escalates;also escalates
C)subsides;escalates
D)subsides;also subsides
Question
About 23 million immigrants are now estimated to live in the United States.
Question
At present,__________ of the world's population lives in urban areas.

A)one-quarter
B)less than one-third
C)one-third
D)more than one-half
Question
__________ is classified as a megacity because its population exceeds __________.

A)Denver;1 million
B)Jacksonville;2 million
C)Houston;5 million
D)Lagos;10 million
Question
How did government policies contribute to the preferential treatment of whites in the suburban housing market after World War II?

A)Loans for homes in racially homogeneous white neighborhoods were typically redlined.
B)Loans for homes in primarily black neighborhoods were typically rated higher than loans for homes in racially mixed neighborhoods.
C)Loans for homes in racially mixed neighborhoods were typically rated higher than loans for homes in primarily black neighborhoods.
D)Loans for homes in racially homogeneous white neighborhoods were typically rated higher than loans for homes in primarily black or in racially mixed neighborhoods.
Question
In the context of urban ecology,what do the initials CBD stand for?

A)central boundary definition
B)central business district
C)city boundary definition
D)city business district
Question
Burgess's model of urban ecology is a model of __________

A)concentric zones spreading outward from a central business district
B)concentric zones spreading outward from a central zone of transition
C)linear arrays spreading across different types of residential zones
D)linear arrays spreading outward from a factory zone
Question
Thinking of cities as the product of intensive and strategic investment is central to __________.

A)the growth machine perspective
B)redlining
C)urban ecology
D)urbanization
Question
All of the following problems are typically associated with suburban sprawl EXCEPT __________,

A)damage to the environment
B)increasing traffic congestion
C)redlining
D)growing commutes
Question
In Manhattan,about __________ of all households are occupied by a single individual.

A)one-quarter
B)a third
C)half
D)two-thirds
Question
Which of the following characteristics of cities was NOT deemed essential by Chicago School sociologist Louis Wirth?

A)density
B)diversity
C)heterogeneity
D)size
Question
That people adjust to their surroundings and find the best fit within their environment is an idea central to __________.

A)migratory patterns
B)redlining
C)urban ecology
D)urbanization
Question
All of the following strategies have been used to keep racial and ethnic minorities out of certain urban areas EXCEPT __________.

A)allocating tax subsidies to favored developers
B)strategic investment in poor neighborhoods
C)policing policies
D)removal of homeless shelters
Question
An influential group of sociologists who used the city of Chicago as a laboratory for the study of urbanism is known as the __________.

A)Chicago Eight
B)Chicago Federation
C)Chicago School
D)Chicago Urbanists
Question
Over the past several decades,__________ have been the fastest growing ethnic groups in rural America.

A)Asians and Latinos
B)Asians and African Americans
C)African Americans and Latinos
D)Latinos and whites
Question
The number of Americans going solo (that is,living by themselves)__________.

A)is decreasing
B)is increasing
C)is neither decreasing nor increasing
D)has been decreasing and increasing in regular waves for decades,depending on economic conditions
Question
Urban ecology,a sociological perspective on how neighborhoods form and change,famously borrows ideas from what other academic discipline?

A)biology
B)economics
C)geography
D)linguistics
Question
__________ is the lack of interpersonal connections and civic engagement.

A)Social context
B)Social isolation
C)Social mobility
D)Social slavery
Question
Descendants of German immigrants,who inhabited Cincinnati's Over the Rhine neighborhood and worked in the city's German-owned breweries,later moved to other parts of the city and found employment in other kinds of businesses.What term do sociologists use to describe this phenomenon?

A)assimilation
B)cultural relativism
C)cultural restructuring
D)framing
Question
What is one criticism of Burgess's model of urban community structure?

A)It fails to account for variations in the spatial structure of cities outside the Northeast and Midwest of the United States.
B)It places too much emphasis on the growth of the black community.
C)It places too much emphasis on the idea of the city as a growth machine.
D)It fails to account for the process of assimilation.
Question
Edge cities have developed as suburban counterparts to __________.

A)the traditional downtown areas of large central cities
B)the traditional factory zones of large central cities
C)the traditional transitional zones of large central cites
D)the tradition bedroom communities of large central cites
Question
How does the perspective of the city as a growth machine counter the Burgess urban ecology model?

A)It denies the role of private property,whereas the Burgess model does not.
B)It denies the role of taxes as drivers of city growth,whereas tax policy is integral to the Burgess model.
C)It recognizes the role of political and economic forces,whereas the Burgess model does not.
D)It recognizes the role of key social institutions,whereas the Burgess model fails to consider them.
Question
How are sociologists who view the city as a growth machine likely to think about issues of racial and ethnic segregation?

A)as a natural process
B)as the product of ecological change
C)as the product of contentious debate
D)as the outcome of the efforts of political and economic elites
Question
Over time,__________ occurs as individual members of immigrant groups begin to integrate with the wider culture and the wider economy,identifying less with the culture of their homeland.

A)assimilation
B)cultural relativism
C)cultural restructuring
D)framing
Question
How did researchers St.Clair Drake and Horace Cayton describe Bronzeville,the name given to the African American section of Chicago's South Side,in 1945?

A)as a "Black Metropolis," where violence,overcrowding,and dilapidated housing were the norm
B)as a desolate and violent "urban ghetto"
C)as a "vibrant community" where black cultural and social life thrived despite high poverty
D)as a slum rife with "gambling dens" and "call-houses"
Question
From the perspective of German sociologist Georg Simmel,in the anonymity of the city individuals find both __________ and __________.

A)freedom;innovation
B)freedom;isolation
C)isolation;community
D)community;innovation
Question
Which of the following is NOT characteristic of the new urban poverty that became associated with American cities in the post-civil rights era?

A)growing concentrations of the urban poor within a smaller number of extremely high-poverty neighborhoods
B)severe racial segregation
C)joblessness
D)smaller concentrations of the urban poor within a growing number of extremely high-poverty neighborhoods
Question
German sociologist Georg Simmel argued that shifts in the environment affecting substantial portions of the population __________ consequences on the ways that individuals act and interact.

A)have
B)have no
C)have few
D)have only subliminal
Question
What does recent sociological research suggest about online social networks,in terms of how they are changing personal and social life?

A)Online social networks may be a poor substitute for voice-to-voice interactions.
B)Online social networks may be a poor substitute for face-to-face interactions.
C)Online social networks may expand and enhance our offline social networks.
D)Online social networks may compete with and undermine our offline social networks.
Question
Claude Fischer's theory of __________ helps us understand why certain urban neighborhoods take on particular identities.

A)ecological stressors
B)income
C)organizational behavior
D)subcultures
Question
The work of Jane Jacobs inspired the ideas of which school of urban design?

A)New Communitarianism
B)New Criticism
C)New Preservationism
D)New Urbanism
Question
One of the most influential theories of urban transformation that helped to explain the deterioration of black neighborhoods from vibrant metropolises to violent ghettos began by documenting __________.

A)the decline in marriageable black men
B)the disappearance of black churches
C)the disappearance of manufacturing jobs from cities
D)the rise of welfare receipts
Question
Social capital refers to the resources available to individuals __________.

A)given their financial and economic status
B)through their relationships and networks
C)through their cultural affiliations
D)given the advantages conferred on them at birth
Question
Which concept of community best encompasses the fundamental concerns of sociologists who study today's cities and communities?

A)Community comprises family members and neighbors,along with nearby friends.
B)Community comprises individuals located in the immediate space surrounding a person,whether family or not.
C)Community is the degree to which individuals connect with,support,and interact with each other.
D)Community comprises strong friendships with people we come in contact with through school,work,or other social institutions.
Question
With which of the following attributes of city life,more so than the others,did writer and activist Jane Jacobs concern herself?

A)the demographic composition of neighborhoods
B)the environmental hazards of neighborhoods
C)the cultural dynamics of neighborhoods
D)the physical layout of neighborhoods
Question
Research suggests that communities with high levels of cohesion and trust have __________.

A)higher levels of violence when the community is very poor
B)higher levels of violence whether the community is very poor or middle income
C)lower levels of violence,but only if the community is very poor
D)lower levels of violence,even if the community is very poor
Question
Which urban scholar described the array of social problems bundled together in the urban slums of Manchester,England in the 1840s?

A)Auguste Comte
B)Friedrich Engels
C)Karl Marx
D)George Simmel
Question
Which of the following outcomes was a product of the urban renewal policy instituted in the Housing Act of 1949?

A)growing populations of African Americans were consolidated in racially segregated urban neighborhoods
B)growing populations of Latino Americans were dispersed from blighted neighborhoods targeted for redevelopment
C)blighted neighborhoods targeted for redevelopment became socially more cohesive
D)residents of blighted neighborhoods targeted for redevelopment were integrated into mixed-income communities nearby
Question
One of the most influential theories of urban transformation that helped to explain the deterioration of black neighborhoods was put forth by which American sociologist?

A)William Julius Wilson
B)St.Clair Drake
C)Horace Cayton
D)Mike Davis
Question
Hull House,the first settlement house founded in America in 1889,was designed to __________.

A)resettle Chicago's urban poor in agricultural communities of the upper Midwest
B)promote social integration among the urban poor from various ethnic and immigrant backgrounds
C)deter cultural deficiencies of the urban poor,especially among recent immigrants
D)separate the native-born urban poor from immigrant communities whose social problems drained public resources
Question
Which group or groups reaped most of the benefits of the urban renewal policy enacted in the Housing Act of 1949?

A)the urban poor
B)developers and the business community
C)rent-controlled property owners
D)new immigrants housed in blighted communities
Question
Which of the following forms of community would a New Urbanist favor?

A)an urban-fringe community with separate zones for housing and for commercial enterprises
B)a gated community of single-family homes interspersed with public spaces
C)a walkable urban community combining different types and scales of housing,offices,retail outlets,medical services,schools,recreational areas,and other commercial or industrial components
D)a mixed-use bedroom community
Question
Perhaps the most notorious example of a government policy directed at the problems of the urban poor that instead resulted in removal of the poor from urban environments was the __________.

A)1889 Hull House Settlement Act
B)1949 Housing Act
C)1965 Hart-Cellar Act
D)1968 Fair Housing Act
Question
Sociologist Herbert Gans,in his study of community life,focused on __________.

A)ecological factors like size,density,and heterogeneity
B)demographic factors like age,race,occupation,and income
C)cultural factors like language,religion,and norms of behavior
D)political factors like conflict and power
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Deck 8: Cities and Communities
1
When sociologist Barry Wellman claimed that community was neither "lost" nor "saved" but was instead "liberated," he was arguing for thinking about community strictly in terms of geography and the physical layout of neighborhoods.
False
2
Sociologists regard the growth in the number of Americans living by themselves principally as a negative trend that points to growing levels of social isolation.
False
3
Jane Addams founded Hull House,the first settlement house in America,in Chicago.
True
4
Redlining is the practice of identifying the homes in racially homogenous white neighborhoods that carry the largest mortgages.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
The social and economic integration of different groups within a city relates directly to the form and spatial layout of city neighborhoods.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
New Urbanists call for a return to mixed-use,walkable urban communities as a response to suburban sprawl.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
According to German sociologist Georg Simmel,individuals find both freedom and isolation in rural communities.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Urban renewal was used in many cities to consolidate growing populations of African Americans and to reinforce racial segregation in urban neighborhoods.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
When a city is viewed as a growth machine,urban change is seen as driven by a powerful set of economic elites.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
A general critique of the urban ecology perspective is that it fails to consider the role of political and economic forces that affect the development of cities.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Chicago School sociologist Ernest Burgess developed a model of urban community structure based on crime statistics.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
12
Social capital refers to the resources available to individuals through their financial reserves and investment savvy.
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k this deck
13
Scholars who study intensely violent neighborhoods find that a strong sense of community cannot flourish there.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
During the nineteenth century,as agriculture became more mechanized,more people were drawn into rural areas than into cities.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
The disappearance of manufacturing jobs from central cities was a factor contributing to the transformation of vibrant neighborhoods into neighborhoods with concentrated poverty.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
The Fair Housing Act (1968)made discrimination in the public housing markets illegal,whereas discrimination in private housing markets was unaffected by the legislation.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
At present,more than half of the world's population lives in urban areas.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Although scholars have shown that developers and the business community reaped most of the benefits of the urban renewal policy articulated in the 1949 Housing Act,urban renewal unequivocally improved housing for the poor in blighted neighborhoods that typically lacked social cohesion.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Edge cities are suburban counterparts to the traditional downtown areas of large central cities.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
The dominant model of assimilation for immigrant families in America is one of upward mobility into the cultural mainstream.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
According to demographer Kingsley Davis,in the modern world,the process of urbanization follows a(n)__________.

A)bell-shaped curve
B)circular function
C)S curve
D)straight line
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Before the emergence of widespread industry,the pace of urbanization was __________.

A)virtually nonexistent
B)slow and gradual
C)level
D)rapid and steep
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
Demographic shifts in Miami,Florida over the last 40 years show a dramatic rise in the Latino population.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Our world is becoming __________.

A)decreasingly suburbanized
B)decreasingly urbanized
C)increasingly urbanized
D)increasingly conurbanized
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
The main cause of population growth in cities in the nineteenth century was __________.

A)increasing life expectancy
B)increasing numbers of births
C)migration
D)higher wages
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Before industrialization,daily life for the vast majority of people focused on __________.

A)travel and trade
B)cottage industry
C)mining
D)immediate sustenance
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Dallas/Fort Worth is an example of an urban form known as a __________.

A)biurb
B)megaurb
C)polyurb
D)conurb
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Global cities are hubs of international finance and technology in a world where business activity crosses national boundaries easily.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
One way to demonstrate the degree to which the world has become connected is through telephone conversations rather than Internet traffic.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
When manufacturing jobs that once formed the base of urban labor markets began to decline rapidly,they were replaced exclusively by low-wage service-sector jobs.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Cities first arose over __________ years ago.

A)5,000
B)7,500
C)8,500
D)10,000
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
In the twentieth century,the pace of suburbanization quickened because of all the following EXCEPT __________.

A)government subsidies for cars
B)government subsidies for home ownership
C)government subsidies for highway construction
D)government subsidies for gentrification
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
__________ was the first nation to industrialize.

A)Britain
B)China
C)Germany
D)The United States
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
How does the U.S.Census Bureau classify urban areas?

A)as areas with a population density of at least 1,000 people per square mile
B)as areas with a population density of at least 1,000 people per square mile,plus all surrounding areas that have an overall density of at least 500 people per square mile
C)as areas with a population density of at least 5,000 people per square mile
D)as areas with a population density of at least 5,000 people per square mile,plus all surrounding areas that have an overall density of at least 500 people per square mile
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
The U.S.Census Bureau's definition of urban areas is based on __________.

A)density
B)heterogeneity
C)remote sensing
D)UN estimates
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
What is the Great Migration?

A)the movement of African Americans from the rural South to industrial cities of the North
B)the movement of Latinos from Central and South America to the American Southwest
C)the movement of Mormons to present-day Utah
D)the movement of European Jews to Palestine in the 1920s
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
After cities reach their carrying capacity,the demand for labor __________ and the cost of urban space __________.

A)escalates;subsides
B)escalates;also escalates
C)subsides;escalates
D)subsides;also subsides
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
About 23 million immigrants are now estimated to live in the United States.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
At present,__________ of the world's population lives in urban areas.

A)one-quarter
B)less than one-third
C)one-third
D)more than one-half
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
__________ is classified as a megacity because its population exceeds __________.

A)Denver;1 million
B)Jacksonville;2 million
C)Houston;5 million
D)Lagos;10 million
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
How did government policies contribute to the preferential treatment of whites in the suburban housing market after World War II?

A)Loans for homes in racially homogeneous white neighborhoods were typically redlined.
B)Loans for homes in primarily black neighborhoods were typically rated higher than loans for homes in racially mixed neighborhoods.
C)Loans for homes in racially mixed neighborhoods were typically rated higher than loans for homes in primarily black neighborhoods.
D)Loans for homes in racially homogeneous white neighborhoods were typically rated higher than loans for homes in primarily black or in racially mixed neighborhoods.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
In the context of urban ecology,what do the initials CBD stand for?

A)central boundary definition
B)central business district
C)city boundary definition
D)city business district
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
Burgess's model of urban ecology is a model of __________

A)concentric zones spreading outward from a central business district
B)concentric zones spreading outward from a central zone of transition
C)linear arrays spreading across different types of residential zones
D)linear arrays spreading outward from a factory zone
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
Thinking of cities as the product of intensive and strategic investment is central to __________.

A)the growth machine perspective
B)redlining
C)urban ecology
D)urbanization
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
All of the following problems are typically associated with suburban sprawl EXCEPT __________,

A)damage to the environment
B)increasing traffic congestion
C)redlining
D)growing commutes
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
In Manhattan,about __________ of all households are occupied by a single individual.

A)one-quarter
B)a third
C)half
D)two-thirds
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
Which of the following characteristics of cities was NOT deemed essential by Chicago School sociologist Louis Wirth?

A)density
B)diversity
C)heterogeneity
D)size
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
48
That people adjust to their surroundings and find the best fit within their environment is an idea central to __________.

A)migratory patterns
B)redlining
C)urban ecology
D)urbanization
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
49
All of the following strategies have been used to keep racial and ethnic minorities out of certain urban areas EXCEPT __________.

A)allocating tax subsidies to favored developers
B)strategic investment in poor neighborhoods
C)policing policies
D)removal of homeless shelters
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
50
An influential group of sociologists who used the city of Chicago as a laboratory for the study of urbanism is known as the __________.

A)Chicago Eight
B)Chicago Federation
C)Chicago School
D)Chicago Urbanists
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51
Over the past several decades,__________ have been the fastest growing ethnic groups in rural America.

A)Asians and Latinos
B)Asians and African Americans
C)African Americans and Latinos
D)Latinos and whites
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52
The number of Americans going solo (that is,living by themselves)__________.

A)is decreasing
B)is increasing
C)is neither decreasing nor increasing
D)has been decreasing and increasing in regular waves for decades,depending on economic conditions
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53
Urban ecology,a sociological perspective on how neighborhoods form and change,famously borrows ideas from what other academic discipline?

A)biology
B)economics
C)geography
D)linguistics
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54
__________ is the lack of interpersonal connections and civic engagement.

A)Social context
B)Social isolation
C)Social mobility
D)Social slavery
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55
Descendants of German immigrants,who inhabited Cincinnati's Over the Rhine neighborhood and worked in the city's German-owned breweries,later moved to other parts of the city and found employment in other kinds of businesses.What term do sociologists use to describe this phenomenon?

A)assimilation
B)cultural relativism
C)cultural restructuring
D)framing
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56
What is one criticism of Burgess's model of urban community structure?

A)It fails to account for variations in the spatial structure of cities outside the Northeast and Midwest of the United States.
B)It places too much emphasis on the growth of the black community.
C)It places too much emphasis on the idea of the city as a growth machine.
D)It fails to account for the process of assimilation.
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57
Edge cities have developed as suburban counterparts to __________.

A)the traditional downtown areas of large central cities
B)the traditional factory zones of large central cities
C)the traditional transitional zones of large central cites
D)the tradition bedroom communities of large central cites
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58
How does the perspective of the city as a growth machine counter the Burgess urban ecology model?

A)It denies the role of private property,whereas the Burgess model does not.
B)It denies the role of taxes as drivers of city growth,whereas tax policy is integral to the Burgess model.
C)It recognizes the role of political and economic forces,whereas the Burgess model does not.
D)It recognizes the role of key social institutions,whereas the Burgess model fails to consider them.
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59
How are sociologists who view the city as a growth machine likely to think about issues of racial and ethnic segregation?

A)as a natural process
B)as the product of ecological change
C)as the product of contentious debate
D)as the outcome of the efforts of political and economic elites
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60
Over time,__________ occurs as individual members of immigrant groups begin to integrate with the wider culture and the wider economy,identifying less with the culture of their homeland.

A)assimilation
B)cultural relativism
C)cultural restructuring
D)framing
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61
How did researchers St.Clair Drake and Horace Cayton describe Bronzeville,the name given to the African American section of Chicago's South Side,in 1945?

A)as a "Black Metropolis," where violence,overcrowding,and dilapidated housing were the norm
B)as a desolate and violent "urban ghetto"
C)as a "vibrant community" where black cultural and social life thrived despite high poverty
D)as a slum rife with "gambling dens" and "call-houses"
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62
From the perspective of German sociologist Georg Simmel,in the anonymity of the city individuals find both __________ and __________.

A)freedom;innovation
B)freedom;isolation
C)isolation;community
D)community;innovation
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63
Which of the following is NOT characteristic of the new urban poverty that became associated with American cities in the post-civil rights era?

A)growing concentrations of the urban poor within a smaller number of extremely high-poverty neighborhoods
B)severe racial segregation
C)joblessness
D)smaller concentrations of the urban poor within a growing number of extremely high-poverty neighborhoods
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64
German sociologist Georg Simmel argued that shifts in the environment affecting substantial portions of the population __________ consequences on the ways that individuals act and interact.

A)have
B)have no
C)have few
D)have only subliminal
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65
What does recent sociological research suggest about online social networks,in terms of how they are changing personal and social life?

A)Online social networks may be a poor substitute for voice-to-voice interactions.
B)Online social networks may be a poor substitute for face-to-face interactions.
C)Online social networks may expand and enhance our offline social networks.
D)Online social networks may compete with and undermine our offline social networks.
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66
Claude Fischer's theory of __________ helps us understand why certain urban neighborhoods take on particular identities.

A)ecological stressors
B)income
C)organizational behavior
D)subcultures
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67
The work of Jane Jacobs inspired the ideas of which school of urban design?

A)New Communitarianism
B)New Criticism
C)New Preservationism
D)New Urbanism
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68
One of the most influential theories of urban transformation that helped to explain the deterioration of black neighborhoods from vibrant metropolises to violent ghettos began by documenting __________.

A)the decline in marriageable black men
B)the disappearance of black churches
C)the disappearance of manufacturing jobs from cities
D)the rise of welfare receipts
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69
Social capital refers to the resources available to individuals __________.

A)given their financial and economic status
B)through their relationships and networks
C)through their cultural affiliations
D)given the advantages conferred on them at birth
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70
Which concept of community best encompasses the fundamental concerns of sociologists who study today's cities and communities?

A)Community comprises family members and neighbors,along with nearby friends.
B)Community comprises individuals located in the immediate space surrounding a person,whether family or not.
C)Community is the degree to which individuals connect with,support,and interact with each other.
D)Community comprises strong friendships with people we come in contact with through school,work,or other social institutions.
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71
With which of the following attributes of city life,more so than the others,did writer and activist Jane Jacobs concern herself?

A)the demographic composition of neighborhoods
B)the environmental hazards of neighborhoods
C)the cultural dynamics of neighborhoods
D)the physical layout of neighborhoods
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72
Research suggests that communities with high levels of cohesion and trust have __________.

A)higher levels of violence when the community is very poor
B)higher levels of violence whether the community is very poor or middle income
C)lower levels of violence,but only if the community is very poor
D)lower levels of violence,even if the community is very poor
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73
Which urban scholar described the array of social problems bundled together in the urban slums of Manchester,England in the 1840s?

A)Auguste Comte
B)Friedrich Engels
C)Karl Marx
D)George Simmel
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74
Which of the following outcomes was a product of the urban renewal policy instituted in the Housing Act of 1949?

A)growing populations of African Americans were consolidated in racially segregated urban neighborhoods
B)growing populations of Latino Americans were dispersed from blighted neighborhoods targeted for redevelopment
C)blighted neighborhoods targeted for redevelopment became socially more cohesive
D)residents of blighted neighborhoods targeted for redevelopment were integrated into mixed-income communities nearby
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75
One of the most influential theories of urban transformation that helped to explain the deterioration of black neighborhoods was put forth by which American sociologist?

A)William Julius Wilson
B)St.Clair Drake
C)Horace Cayton
D)Mike Davis
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76
Hull House,the first settlement house founded in America in 1889,was designed to __________.

A)resettle Chicago's urban poor in agricultural communities of the upper Midwest
B)promote social integration among the urban poor from various ethnic and immigrant backgrounds
C)deter cultural deficiencies of the urban poor,especially among recent immigrants
D)separate the native-born urban poor from immigrant communities whose social problems drained public resources
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77
Which group or groups reaped most of the benefits of the urban renewal policy enacted in the Housing Act of 1949?

A)the urban poor
B)developers and the business community
C)rent-controlled property owners
D)new immigrants housed in blighted communities
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78
Which of the following forms of community would a New Urbanist favor?

A)an urban-fringe community with separate zones for housing and for commercial enterprises
B)a gated community of single-family homes interspersed with public spaces
C)a walkable urban community combining different types and scales of housing,offices,retail outlets,medical services,schools,recreational areas,and other commercial or industrial components
D)a mixed-use bedroom community
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79
Perhaps the most notorious example of a government policy directed at the problems of the urban poor that instead resulted in removal of the poor from urban environments was the __________.

A)1889 Hull House Settlement Act
B)1949 Housing Act
C)1965 Hart-Cellar Act
D)1968 Fair Housing Act
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80
Sociologist Herbert Gans,in his study of community life,focused on __________.

A)ecological factors like size,density,and heterogeneity
B)demographic factors like age,race,occupation,and income
C)cultural factors like language,religion,and norms of behavior
D)political factors like conflict and power
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 125 flashcards in this deck.