Suburbanization in the United States after 1945
[2023-05-01 01:27:10]
Large-scale migration to the suburbs was an important feature of American life after 1945. Before the Second World War, only 13% of Americans lived in the suburbs. But by 2010, over half of the population of the United States lived in the suburbs. The economy, politics, society of the country are in the suburbs in an important sense. The suburbs form the experience of various problems such as car dependence and commuting habits, consumption and saving patterns, race and taxation, energy and nature, privacy and community. Surrounded by the garden, in the world of popular culture and imagination set a block outside of the center of the city to define the day-to-day experience of most American families, single detached houses in the detached house dream of America It is set. The suburbs of this country are equally important economic conditions and are the home of the important high-tech industry, retail trade, "logistics" and office employment. In addition, the politics of the United States has hampered the political movement within the party for decades, from grassroots conservatism to centralism elite individualism, environmentalism, feminism, and social justice. In short, the suburbs are an important environment for the American life after the war.
Even as the size and influence of the suburbs increases, it reflects the wider cross section of the United States itself, which is more diverse. This comprehensive transformation shows two important chronological phases in suburban history since 1945. The vastness of the postwar era (1945 - 1970), ethnization, large suburbanization, social diversification and urban complexity. Era (since 1970). In the first period, the suburbs witnessed an expansion of isolated white privileges enhanced by government policies, monopolistic practices and grassroots political movements. In the second period, the suburbs lived in a wider range of Americans who brought extensive prospects, lifestyles, values and politics. Residents in the suburbs are the place where many immigrants, citizens, African-Americans, the poor, the elderly and various families live. In the face of stubborn foreign phobia in the wealthy suburbs, inequality continues in metropolitan areas and continues to emerge in the poor, poor suburbs. Reform efforts are aimed at mitigating regional inequality and adopting a coordinated regional approach to promote sustainable development. In recent years, the dual discourse of suburban crisis and suburban resurrection captured the complexity of the US suburbs.
In order to understand what happened in the vicinity of East Bay from 1945 onwards, it is necessary to take into consideration the extensive structure of the American capitalism and the federal government, as well as the specificity and unforeseen circumstances of the place, You must understand deeply about it. Here, the book explores the second political and cultural site. California 's boost, pop, and personalized greenhouses cultivated property and homeowned political culture. Postwar suburbanization is a product of local planning and politics, and it is also a product of the country's macroeconomic process and broad capital flows. Indeed, suburbanization as the main factor in the flow of capital in the country is to overlook the diversity of suburban forms and the importance of the regional problems and markets in their appearance. In Auckland, the circulation of industries in the region and large cities was promoted by the planners and post-push after the Second World War.
1945 told the end of the era. In terms of foreign policy, the United Nations was established as a global organization to help prevent future World War on October 24, 1945. On 4 December 1945, the Senator handed out 7 votes from 65 votes, ratified the treaty that caused the United States to fully engage the United Nations, and granted vesting rights to the most important Security Council. This shows the traditional interest in US strategic regional iss