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- Q7201345 subject Q6961831.
- Q7201345 subject Q8282186.
- Q7201345 subject Q8888500.
- Q7201345 subject Q8888502.
- Q7201345 abstract "In urban planning in the United States, planned shrinkage is a controversial public policy of the deliberate withdrawal of city services to blighted neighborhoods as a means of coping with dwindling tax revenues. This should not be confused with shrink to survive, which demolishes already empty neighborhoods to return them to rural use. Planned shrinkage involves decreasing city services such as police patrols, garbage removal, street repairs, and fire protection, from selected city neighborhoods suffering from urban decay, crime, and poverty. While it has been advocated as a way to concentrate city services for maximum effectiveness given serious budgetary constraints, it has been criticized as an attempt to "encourage the exodus of undesirable populations" as well as to open up blighted neighborhoods for development by private interests. Planned shrinkage was mentioned as a development strategy for the South Bronx section of New York City in the 1970s, and more recently for another urban area in the United States, the city of New Orleans. The term was first used in New York City in 1976 by Housing Commissioner Roger Starr.".
- Q7201345 thumbnail BrokenPromises_JohnFekner.jpg?width=300.
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- Q7201345 wikiPageWikiLink Q6961831.
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- Q7201345 wikiPageWikiLink Q7245186.
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- Q7201345 wikiPageWikiLink Q8282186.
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- Q7201345 wikiPageWikiLink Q8888500.
- Q7201345 wikiPageWikiLink Q8888502.
- Q7201345 wikiPageWikiLink Q920600.
- Q7201345 wikiPageWikiLink Q9684.
- Q7201345 comment "In urban planning in the United States, planned shrinkage is a controversial public policy of the deliberate withdrawal of city services to blighted neighborhoods as a means of coping with dwindling tax revenues. This should not be confused with shrink to survive, which demolishes already empty neighborhoods to return them to rural use.".
- Q7201345 label "Planned shrinkage".
- Q7201345 depiction BrokenPromises_JohnFekner.jpg.