The Dictionary of Human Geography

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bycommuting. These are comprised of diverse
suburbs with a variety of social, economic and
landscape characteristics and have, as a result,
been interpreted in a variety of ways. In terms
of their culture and design, they have fre-
quently been criticized for their blandness, lack
ofcommunityandsegregation. These cri-
tiques are paralleled by concerns about the
environmental impact of suburban landscape
forms and ways of life (see edge city;
exopolis;ribbon development;sprawl).
Low-density, automobile-oriented suburbs
are increasingly common features of urban
regions across the globe and certain elements
of the suburban form, such asgated com-
munities, are springing up in numerous
countries (Webster, Glasze and Frantz,
2002). The process of suburbanization is
differentiated somewhat by the local or
national conditions in which it operates.
Lemansky (2006), for instance, describes
the character of suburbanization and the
creation of master-planned gated communi-
ties in post-apartheid South Africa and
notes the complex patterns of proximity,
social exclusionand connection that exist
betweenwealthyandpoorresidentsofsub-
urban Cape Town. Zhou and Ma (2000), for
their part, emphasize the importance of sub-
urbanization in a number of Chinese cities.
Theyarguethatitisatamuchlessdevel-
oped stage (with suburbs still dominated by
central cities) than in the ‘classic’ case of the
USA. They also suggest that the role of the
strong Chinesestatein shaping suburban-
ization has a great deal to do with the dis-
tinctiveness of this case.
Yet, the US case is worth considering as a
specific and by no means easily generalizable
example of thepolitical economyof subur-
banization. The US suburbanization process
accelerated in the 1920s with the explosion of
automobile ownership in the 1920s.
‘Automobile suburbs’ such as the low-density
Country Club District in Kansas City,
Missouri, which included the first car-oriented
shopping mall, emerged in the 1920s as pri-
vate developers sought to profit from
increased automobility. The Depression of
the early 1930s dampened the housing mar-
ket, making it an unattractiveinvestmentfor
private developers. The state’s subsequent
intervention sought to stimulate and regulate
the development industry while bolstering the
ideological pre-eminence of the privateprop-
erty system (Walker, 1981). By the early
1960s, half the country’s urban population
lived in suburbs. This trend in residential

suburbanization has been paralleled by
manufacturing, commerce and retail, which
have all suburbanized. Contemporary authors
emphasize the increasing autonomy of US
suburbs from traditional central cities, and
speak of a ‘postsuburban’ situation (cf. Zhou
and Ma, 2000).
Suburbanization is, then, a process that
both reflects and constitutes the political
and economic geographies of contemporary
cities. It is also a focus of those interested in
social and cultural questions, particularly
aroundraceandgender. Ethnic suburban-
ization is raising important questions about
the validity of arguments about the social
homogeneity of suburbs and is also empha-
sizing the global connectedness of these
places (Li, 1998). Nonetheless, suburban
geographies are still marked by significant
discrimination (seeredlining;urban man-
agers and gatekeepers). The shaping of
gender roles and relations in and through
suburban space is also a major focus of geo-
graphical enquiry. In the postwar period,
suburbandomesticitybecame ahegemonic
idea through which to reinforce traditional
gender relations and connections between
women and waged work. Analysis of con-
temporary relationships between gender,
suburbia and work has entailed, among other
things, a focus on gender differentiation
in travel patterns and accessibility to
waged work and public facilities (England,
1993). em

Suggested reading
Bourne (1996); Walker (1981).

sunbelt/snowbelt A popular term describ-
ing the polarization of the USspace-economy
from the 1960s on: it contrasts areas of relative
economic decline (especially in manufacturing
industry) concentrated in the country’s north-
east (the ‘snowbelt’, or ‘frostbelt’: cf.rust-
belt) with those, largely in the south and west,
experiencing rapid economic and population
growth. This change in the inter-regionaldiv-
ision of labour reflects the comparative
advantage and competitive advantages
enjoyed by sunbelt states through relatively
cheap and non-unionized labour, their attract-
ive physical environments, and substantial
federal government investment there – as in
the aerospace and other defence industries.
The term is now frequently applied in other
countries: the M4 motorway corridor extend-
ing west from London through Swindon to

Gregory / The Dictionary of Human Geography 9781405132879_4_S Final Proof page 732 1.4.2009 3:23pm

SUNBELT/SNOWBELT
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