Everything about Jane Jacobs totally explained
Jane Jacobs,
OC,
O.Ont (
May 4,
1916 –
April 25,
2006) was an
American-born Canadian
urbanist,
writer and
activist. She is best known for
The Death and Life of Great American Cities (1961), a powerful critique of the
urban renewal policies of the 1950s in the United States. The book has been credited with reaching beyond planning issues to influence the spirit of the times. "Jacobs came down firmly on the side of spontaneous inventiveness of individuals, as against abstract plans imposed by governments and corporations," wrote Canadian critic
Robert Fulford. "She was an unlikely intellectual warrior, a theorist who opposed most theories, a teacher with no teaching job and no university degree, a writer who wrote well but infrequently."
American Years
Jane Butzner was born in
Scranton,
Pennsylvania, the daughter of a doctor and a former schoolteacher and nurse, who were Protestant in a Catholic town—adherents of a minority religion. After graduating from Scranton's Central High School, she took an unpaid position as the assistant to the women's page editor at the
Scranton Tribune. A year later, in the middle of the
Great Depression, she left Scranton for
New York City.
During her first several years in the city, Jacobs held a variety of jobs, working mainly as a
stenographer and freelance writer, often writing about working districts in the city. These experiences, she later said, "...gave me more of a notion of what was going on in the city and what business was like, what work was like." Her first job was for a trade magazine, first as a secretary, then as an editor. She also sold articles to the
Sunday Herald Tribune. She then became a feature writer for the
Office of War Information. While working there she met an architect named Robert Hyde Jacobs whom she married in 1944. Together they'd two sons and a daughter.
She studied at
Columbia University's extension school (now the
School of General Studies) for two years, taking courses in
geology,
zoology,
law,
political science, and
economics. About the freedom to study her wide-ranging interests, she said:
Loyalty Security Board at the
United States Department of State. In her foreword to her answer she said:
expressways and supporting
neighborhoods were common themes in her life. In 1962, she was the chairperson of the
Joint Committee to Stop the Lower Manhattan Expressway, when the downtown expressway plan was killed. She was again involved in stopping the Lower Manhattan Expressway and was arrested during a demonstration on April 10, 1968. Jacobs opposed
Robert Moses, who had already forced through the
Cross-Bronx Expressway and other roadways against neighborhood opposition. A late 1990s
Public Broadcasting System (PBS) documentary series on New York's history devoted a full hour of its fourteen-hours to the battle between Moses and Jacobs. The earlier, highly critical Moses biography
The Power Broker doesn't mention her and gives only passing mention to this event.
Canadian Life
In 1968, Jacobs moved to
Toronto, where she lived until her death. She decided to leave the United States in part because of her objection to the
Vietnam War and worry about the fate of her two
draft-age sons. She and her husband chose Toronto because it was pleasant and offered him work opportunities. She quickly became a leading figure in her new city and helped stop the proposed
Spadina Expressway. A frequent theme of her work was to ask whether we're building cities for people or for cars. She was arrested twice during demonstrations. She also had considerable influence on the regeneration of the
St. Lawrence neighborhood, a
housing project regarded as a success. She became a Canadian citizen in 1974, and she later told writer
James Howard Kunstler that dual citizenship wasn't possible at the time, implying that her US citizenship was lost.
In 1980, she offered an urbanistic perspective on
Québec's sovereignty in her book
The Question of Separatism: Quebec and the Struggle over Separation.
Jacobs was an advocate of a
Province of Toronto to separate the city proper from Ontario. Jacobs said, "Cities, to thrive in the 21st century, must separate themselves politically from their surrounding areas."
She was selected to be an officer of the
Order of Canada in 1996 for her seminal writings and thought-provoking commentaries on
urban development. The Community and Urban Sociology section of the American Sociological Association awarded her its Outstanding Lifetime Contribution award in 2002.
In 1997, the City of Toronto sponsored a conference titled "Jane Jacobs: Ideas That Matter", which led to a book by the same name. At the end of the conference, the
Jane Jacobs Prize was created. It includes an annual stipend of $5,000 for three years to be given to "celebrate Toronto's original, unsung heroes — by seeking out citizens who are engaged in activities that contribute to the city's vitality".
Jacobs never shied away from expressing her political support for specific candidates. She backed an ecologist,
Tooker Gomberg, in Toronto's 2000 mayoralty race (he lost), and was an adviser to
David Miller's campaign in 2003, at a time when he was seen as a
longshot (he won).
She died in
Toronto Western Hospital at the age of 89, on 25 April 2006, apparently of a
stroke. She was survived by a brother, James Butzner; two sons, James and Ned, and a daughter, Burgin Jacobs; by two grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Upon her death her family's statement noted:
» :"What's important isn't that she died but that she lived, and that her life’s work has greatly influenced the way we think. Please remember her by reading her books and implementing her ideas."
Legacy
As a tribute to Jacobs, the
Rockefeller Foundation announced on February 9, 2007 the creation of the
Jane Jacobs Medal, "to recognize individuals who have made a significant contribution to thinking about urban design, specifically in New York City." From the mid 1950s to the mid 1960s, the foundation's Humanities Division sponsored an "Urban Design Studies" research program, of which Jacobs was the best known grantee.. In September 2007 the Rockefeller Foundation awarded Barry Benepe, co-founder of NYC's Green Market program and a founding member of Transportation Alternatives, with the inaugural Jane Jacobs Medal for Lifetime Leadership and a $100,000 cash prize. The inaugural Jane Jacobs Medal for new Ideas and Activism was awarded to Omar Freilla, the founder of Green Worker Cooperatives in the South Bronx; Mr. Freilla donated his $100,000 to his organization.
In May of 2008, the Rockefeller Foundation announced that Peggy Shepard, executive director of West Harlem Environmental Action, would received the 2008 Jane Jacobs Medal for Lifetime Leadership and Alexie Torres-Fleming, founder of Youth Ministries for Peace and Justice, wouild receive the award for New Ideas and Activism. Both women will receive their medals and $100,000 awards at a dinner ceremony in September 2008 in New York City.
The City of Toronto proclaimed Friday May 4, 2007 as Jane Jacobs Day in Toronto. Two dozen free walks around and about Toronto neighbourhoods, dubbed 'Jane's Walk', were held on Saturday May 5, 2007. A Jane's Walk event was held in New York in on September 29 and 30, 2007 and, for 2008, the event has spread to eight cities and towns across Canada.
She was also famous for her saying, "Eyes on the Street".
The
Municipal Art Society of New York has partnered with the
Rockefeller Foundation to host an exhibit focusing on "Jane Jacobs and the Future of New York" which opened at the MAS on September 26, 2007. The exhibit aims to educate the public on her writings and activism and uses tools to encourage new generations to become active in issues involving their own neighborhoods. An accompanying exhibit publication includes essays and articles by such architecture critics, artists, activists and journalists as
Malcolm Gladwell,
Reverend Billy,
Robert Neuwirth,
Tom Wolfe,
Thomas de Monchaux, and
William McDonough. Many of these contributors are participating in a series of panel discussions on "Jane Jacobs and the Future of New York" taking place at venues across the city in Fall, 2007.
Works
Jane Jacobs spent her life studying cities. Her books include:
The Death and Life of Great American Cities
The Death and Life of Great American Cities is her single-most influential book and possibly the most influential American book on urban planning and cities. Widely read by both planning professionals and the general public, the book is a strong critique of the urban renewal policies of the 1950s, which, she claimed, destroyed communities and created isolated, unnatural urban spaces. Jacobs advocated dense, mixed-use neighborhoods and frequently cited
New York City's
Greenwich Village as an example of a vibrant urban community.
Robert Caro has cited it as the strongest influence on
The Power Broker, his legendary biography of Robert Moses.
Beyond the practical lessons in city design and planning that
Death and Life offers, the theoretical underpinnings of the work challenge the modern development mindset. Jane Jacobs adheres to inductive, nearly scientific, reasoning. Moreover, she's open to anecdotal evidence coming to bear on what has been induced from harder data.
The Economy of Cities
The thesis of this book is that cities are the primary drivers of economic development.
Jacobs' main argument is that all economic growth derives from urban
import replacement. Import replacement is when a city starts producing locally goods that it formerly imported, for example, Tokyo bicycle factories replacing Tokyo bicycle importers in the 1800s. Jacobs claims that import replacement builds up local infrastructure, skills, and production. Jacobs also claims that the increased produce is exported to other cities, giving those other cities a new opportunity to engage in import replacement, thus producing a positive cycle of growth.
In an interview with Bill Steigerwald in
Reason Magazine (06/01), Jacobs said that if she's remembered for being a great intellectual she'll be remembered not for her work concerning city planning, but for the discovery of import replacement. However, her ideas are similar to those that had begun to be advanced earlier about
import substitution by scholars such as
Andre Gunder Frank.
The book also advances a new argument that cities preceded agriculture, rather than the reverse, which was archaeologists' previous belief. Archaeologists believed that cities required a food surplus to support specialist workers, thus requiring an existing agricultural economy. Jacobs claims that instead, cities already existed as trading posts, and discovered agriculture through trade in wild animals and grains, and then disseminated agriculture to rural areas.
Cities and the Wealth of Nations
Beginning with a concise treatment of classical economics, this books challenges one of the fundamental assumptions of the greatest economists. Classical (and Neo-classical) economists consider the nation-state to be the main player in
macroeconomics. Jacobs makes a forceful argument that it isn't the nation-state, rather it's the city which is the true player in this world wide game. She restates the idea of import replacement from her earlier book
The Economy of Cities, while speculating on the further ramifications of considering the city first and the nation second, or not at all.
The Question of Separatism: Quebec and the Struggle over Sovereignty-Association
"In 1979 and 1980, Jane Jacobs reached the conclusion that Quebec sovereignty was necessary because of her understanding of how cities emerge and how they influence the development of nations. She looked specifically at Montreal and Toronto and foresaw the regionalization of Montreal, making it into a sort of feeder for Toronto as regional airports are to a hub. 'In sum,' she wrote, 'Montreal can't afford to behave like other Canadian regional cities without doing great damage to the economic well-being of the Quebecois. It must instead become a creative economic centre in its own right… Yet there's probably no chance of this happening if Quebec remains a province.'"
Systems of Survival
Systems of Survival: A Dialogue on the Moral Foundations of Commerce and Politics moves outside of the city, studying the
moral underpinnings of
work. As with her other work, she used an observational approach. This book is written as a
Platonic dialogue. It appears that she (as described by characters in her book) took newspaper clippings of moral judgements related to work, collected and sorted them to find that they fit two patterns of moral behaviour that were mutually exclusive. She calls these two patterns "Moral Syndrome A", or commercial moral syndrome and "Moral Syndrome B" or guardian moral syndrome. She claims that the commercial moral syndrome is applicable to business owners, scientists, farmers, and traders. Similarly, she claims that the guardian moral syndrome is applicable to government, charities, hunter-gatherers, and religious institutions. She also claims that these Moral Syndromes are fixed, and don't fluctuate over time.
It is important to stress that Jane Jacobs is providing a theory about the morality of work, and not all moral ideas. Moral ideas that are not included in her syndrome are applicable to both syndromes.
Jane Jacobs goes on to describe what happens when these two moral syndromes are mixed, showing the work underpinnings of the
Mafia and
communism, and what happens when New York Subway Police are paid bonuses here — reinterpreted slightly as a part of the larger analysis.
The Nature of Economies
The Nature of Economies, also in
Platonic dialogue form, and based on the premise that "human beings exist wholly within nature as part of the natural order in every respect" (p
ix), argues that the same principles underlie both
ecosystems and
economies:
"development and co-development through differentiations and their combinations; expansion through diverse, multiple uses of energy; and self-maintenance through self-refueling" (p82).
Jacobs' characters then discuss the four methods by which "dynamically stable systems" may evade collapse: "bifurcations;
positive-feedback loops;
negative-feedback controls; and emergency adaptations" (p86). Their conversations also cover the "double nature of fitness for survival" (traits to avoid destroying one's own habitat as well as success in competition to feed and breed, p119), and unpredictability including the
butterfly effect characterized in terms of multiplicity of variables as well as disproportionality of response to cause, and
self-organization where "a system can be making itself up as it goes along" (p137).
Through the dialogue, Jacobs' characters explore and examine the similarities between the functioning of ecosystems and economies. Topics include: environmental and economic development, growth and expansion, and how economies and environments keep themselves alive through "self-refueling". Jacobs also comments on the nature of economic and biological diversity and its role in the development and growth of the two kinds of systems.
The book is infused with many real-world economic and biological examples, which help keep the book "down to earth" and comprehensible, if dense. Concepts are furnished with both economic and biological examples, showing their coherence in both worlds.
One particularly interesting insight is the creation of "something from nothing" — an economy from nowhere. In the biological world, free energy is given through sunlight, but in the economic world natural resources supply this free energy, or at least starter energy. Another interesting insight is the creation of economic diversity through the combination of different technologies, for example the typewriter and television as inputs and outputs of a computer system: this can lead to the creation of "new species of work".
Dark Age Ahead
Published in
2004 by Random House, in
Dark Age Ahead Jacobs argued that "North American" civilization showed signs of spiral of decline comparable to the collapse of the Roman empire. Her thesis focused on "five pillars of our culture that we depend on to stand firm," which can be summarized as the nuclear family (but also community), education, science, representational government and taxes, and corporate and professional accountability. As the title suggests, her outlook was far more pessimistic than in her previous books. However, in the conclusion she admitted that, "At a given time it's hard to tell whether forces of cultural life or death are in the ascendancy. Is suburban sprawl, with its murders of communities and wastes of land, time, and energy, a sign of decay? Or is rising interest in means of overcoming sprawl a sign of vigor and adaptability in North American culture? Arguably, either could turn out to be true."
Activism in later years
During the 2003 Toronto mayoral campaign, Jacobs helped lobby against the construction of a bridge to join the city's waterfront to Toronto City Center Airport (TCCA).
(External Link
) Following the election, Toronto City Council's earlier decision to approve the bridge was reversed and bridge construction project was stopped. TCCA did upgrade the ferry service and the airport is still in operation as of 2008.
Jacobs was also active in a fight against a plan of Royal St. Georges College (an established school very close to Jacobs long-time residence in Toronto's Annex district) to reconfigure its facilities. Jacobs not only suggested that the redesign be stopped, but that the school be forced from the neighbourhood entirely.
(External Link
) Although Toronto council initially rejected the school's plans, the decision was later reversed — and the project was given the go-ahead by the Ontario Municipal Board (OMB) when opponents failed to produce credible witnesses and tried to withdraw from the case during the hearing.
(External Link
)
Criticism of Jane Jacobs
One of the recurring criticisms of Jacobs is that her work is impractical and doesn't reflect the reality of urban politics, which are often controlled by real estate developers and suburban politicians. A response to such critics is to point to the history of cities like
New York City and
Detroit, which suffered in the
1960s and
1970s as suburban populations grew, took control of the politics of the surrounding region, and voted to starve cities to feed suburban sprawl. This fed the
vicious cycle of more departures to the suburbs (see
white flight).
Some
Toronto traffic planners fault Jacobs for preventing them from considering expressways to meet growing demand from suburban growth and automobile traffic as the cancellation of the
Spadina Expressway heralded the end of new
municipal expressways in Toronto. They allege that
public transit has proven to be as expensive as and less effective than urban freeways.
Toronto businesses have had mixed feelings about Jacobs. Some have applauded her leading the way to a thriving urban core. Others have pointed to higher growth in suburban areas surrounding Toronto that have lower taxes and debt, whereas Toronto's debt is growing. Toronto's mayor argued in 2005 that this trend has more to do with inequalities in provincial tax policy than Jacobs' perceived threat to business growth. .
Supporters of Jacobs point out that latent costs have not been taken into consideration. Measures promoted by Jacobs such as urban living and cycling have been argued to be impractical due to skyrocketing downtown land value, although proponents counter that this is the case in the few American cities that have actually maintained a large core population. Jacobs' supporters also claim that there's a lag in time before actual costs of sprawl catch up to suburban communities. They feel it's necessary when implementing such policies to implement them to an entire metropolitan region, and not merely the central municipality.
Another criticism is that Jacobs' approach leads to
gentrification: an observed urban social process whereby urban economic development leads to old neighbourhoods becoming too expensive for the original population once "renewed." The previous inhabitants are replaced by
yuppies and muppies, who enjoy the semi-
bohemian bourgeois lifestyle that sometimes arises. This issue, however, was addressed and criticized in Jacobs'
The Death and Life of Great American Cities. Jacobs refers to this phenomenon as the "self destruction of diversity," and lists it as a developmental obstacle that cities must overcome.
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