Over the past few weeks, I used our understanding of the elite to recognize the way cities are formed. In the "Where to Neighbors" book by William Julius Wilson and Richard Taub, I am watching different communities in Chicago, and "green cities" by Eugenie L. Birch and Susan M. Watcher. Fixed the idea of ​​restoring the ecological foundation. . The way to tie these two texts is to allow cities and communities to be more informative and beneficial.
Taub is one of the ethnographic journalists who prefers to anonymize his research, not within the IRB mission. He wishes to use the actual place name of the book "Working with Neighbors" published in 2006, co - authored with William Julius Wilson of Harvard University on four working classes, middle class and community in Chicago. As the author knows that the council's review of the University of Chicago review does not allow this, do so. Goffman graduate student consultant Mitchell Duneier expressed a different view on the lack of flexibility when the IRB was anonymous. "This is an incident determined by the IRB," Duneier noted that he can use his real name and location in his two ethnographic magazines about Greenwich Village stalls and Chicago restaurants.
William Julius Wilson (1987) promoted empirical research on community and neighborhood influences through poor accountability and analysis in the Chicago community downtown. He recorded the likelihood of poor employment, bad marriage, violence and mobility peculiar to these communities. He also explained how the structural change that created these conditions and the community life in poor urban communities will affect families and children living in them. Wilson has dramatically changed the economic structure of the city center, coupled with the mobility of stronger black dwellings, poverty, lack of resources, and active role model for children and adolescents living there I believe it will not bring it. .
As towns and cities evolve and continue to grow, community housing tends to be the center of development. Over time, as a regional development and rapidly growing community, it can overcome obstacles and continue to grow on a large scale. Some communities are created by themselves and other communities are growing according to plan. The following are useful features to explain the community. Roof lines, pouches, size and shape, building materials, windows and other renowned architectural styles are all part of each community's identity. Normally, the times when houses are built and the economic era are the driving force of architecture.