Small Cities, Big Issues

Reconceiving Community in a Neoliberal Era

Edited by Christopher Walmsley & Terry Kading
Categories: Urban Studies, Planning & Architecture, Social Sciences, Sociology, Political Science, Geography, Geography, Canadian Political Science
Publisher: Athabasca University Press
Paperback : 9781771991636, 364 pages, August 2018
Ebook (PDF) : 9781771991643, 334 pages, July 2018
Ebook (EPUB) : 9781771991650, 334 pages, July 2018
Ebook (Kindle) : 9781771991667, 334 pages, July 2018

Table of contents

Introduction

Part I: Displacement, Isolation, and the Other

1 Homelessness in Small Cities: The Abdication of Federal Responsibility / Terry Kading and Christopher Walmsley

2 Zoned Out: Regulating Street Sex Work in Kamloops, British Columbia / Lorry-Ann Austin

3 Needles in Nanaimo: Exclusionary Versus Inclusionary Approaches to Illicit Drug Users / Sydney Weaver

4 Being Queer in the Small City / Wendy Hulko

5 “Thrown Out into the Community”: The Closure of Tranquille / Diane Purvey

6 Fitting In: Women Parolees in the Small City / Jennifer Murphy

7 Walking in Two Worlds: Aboriginal Peoples in the Small City / Sharnelle Matthew and Kathie McKinnon

Part II: Building Community

8 Social Planning and the Dynamics of Small-City Government / Christopher Walmsley and Terry Kading

9 The Inadequacies of Multiculturalism: Reflections on Ethnicity, Identity Formation, and Community in a Small City / Mónica J. Sánchez-Flores

10 Municipal Approaches to Poverty Reduction in British Columbia: A Comparison of New Westminster and Abbotsford / Robert Harding and Paul Jenkinson

11 Integrated Action and Community Empowerment: Building Relationships of Solidarity in Magog, Québec / Jacques Caillouette

12 Small City, Large Town? Reflections on Neoliberalism in the United Kingdom / Graham Day

Conclusion: The Way Forward

Description

Small Canadian cities confront serious social issues as a result of the neoliberal economic restructuring practiced by both federal and provincial governments since the 1980s. Drastic spending reductions and ongoing restraint in social assistance, income supports, and the provision of affordable housing, combined with the offloading of social responsibilities onto municipalities, has contributed to the generalization of social issues once chiefly associated with Canada’s largest urban centres. As the investigations in this volume illustrate, while some communities responded to these issues with inclusionary and progressive actions others were more exclusionary and reactive—revealing forms of discrimination, exclusion, and “othering” in the implementation of practices and policies. Importantly, however, their investigations reveal a broad range of responses to the social issues they face, and the distinctive attributes of the small city as it struggles to confront increasingly complex social issues.