The Dictionary of Human Geography

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bio-political controversies’ (Whatmore,
2004, p. 1360). sjh

Suggested reading
Whatmore (2004).

post-industrial city Acitywhose economic
geography has passed from a dependence on
manufacturing to an emphasis on service
employment (seeservices). Typically, its dual
labour marketis characterized by a division
between well-paid private- and public-sector
professional and managerial workers and
lower-paid service staff. The pattern of land
uses and social areas in the post-industrial city
shows marked variations from the arrange-
ment in the classic concentric-ring model of
industrial cities (cf.zonal model). The down-
town skyline is now marked by new invest-
ment in office towers, public institutions, arts
and sports complexes, and restaurant and
leisureservices. The brownfield sites of old
industrial and transportation land uses around
downtown have given way to waterfront
redevelopment of condominiums and public
leisure spaces, often the result ofpublic__
private partnerships. A number ofinner-
city neighbourhoods have experienced
reinvestment andgentrificationas the hous-
ing market responds to the downtownlabour
marketof advanced services. New immigrants
and the working poor are being displaced out-
wards to suburban sites, which have become
the new focus of manufacturing and wholesal-
ing, adjacent to the airport and regional high-
way routes. Thesuburbsare diversifying in
lifestyle and social status, and with the emer-
gence of satellite town centres (oredge cities
in the largestmetropolitan areas) are assum-
ing a more urban status themselves.
The characteristics of the post-industrial
city extend beyond its population and land-
use features. Canadian studies indicate that
thegenderand family traits of post-industrial
cities differ from those with a manufacturing
base, with smallerhouseholds, a greater ten-
dency for gender equality in the workplace,
and lower and later marriage rates (Ley,
1996). Lifestyleliberalismand higher levels
ofsecularismare among distinctive attitu-
dinal and cultural associations.
Though typically experiencing economic
and population growth, the post-industrial city
faces significant challenges. Since the 1980s,
neo-liberalpolicy has tended to trade welfare
services for entrepreneurial objectives (Harvey,
1989a), accentuating social and spatial polar-
ization (Walks, 2001). The emphasis upon

quality of lifeconsiderations for the middle
classmight compromise provision of more
basic services; for example, tax dollars
expended on consumer attractions such as
sports stadia could diminish the quality of life
of more impoverished populations (Friedman,
Andrew and Silk, 2004). Population growth
and a large middle-class labour market are
often associated with challenges to housing
affordability (seehousing studies). Under-
investment in public transportation has heigh-
tened the dependence on the private car, lead-
ing to traffic congestion and severe air
pollutionepisodes. And, as the Parisbanlieu
riots of 2005 demonstrated so keenly, subur-
ban sites may be a newly emergent zone of
acutesocial exclusion. dl

Suggested reading
Ley (1980); Robson (1994).

post-industrial society A conceptualization
of the changing conditions ofeconomyand
society in the global north, beginning
approximately in the 1960s. The term was
popularized by Daniel Bell’s immensely influ-
ential book (1999 [1973]), and has enjoyed
widespread dissemination, though not always
with the specificity that Bell intended. Post-
industrial society is concerned with an occu-
pational transformation in advanced societies
as, with automation and outsourcing, employ-
ment moves increasingly to a white-collar, ser-
vice profile, with specialized information and
information technology playing a key role in
the shaping of society and economy. Beyond
this, some authors see an evolutionary process,
with societies passing through discrete eco-
nomic and social stages from the harvesting
of raw materials, to manufacturing, and finally
to the provision ofservicesaiding both con-
sumption and production.
Through the 1970s, several variations on the
theme of post-industrial society emerged.
Influenced by the French student reaction
against inaccessible state bureaucracies,
Alain Touraine (1971) proposed that the hold-
ers of specialized information were becoming a
privileged technocracy, extending control over
growing domains ofeveryday life. A second
stream of work emphasized the holders of spe-
cialized knowledge as a new middleclassof
professional and managerial workers, though
internally fragmented by their variable access
to economic andcultural capitaland their
location in the public and private sectors
(Gouldner, 1979). A third track emphasized
by Manuel Castells and his followers identified

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POST-INDUSTRIAL SOCIETY
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