Metropolitan Area Exports


Book Description

Provides, for the first time, comprehensive U.S. statistics on the merchandise export sales of many of the nation's metro areas. Figures are provided here on the total goods exports of 256 U.S. metro statistical areas that were collectively responsible for about 80% of all U.S. merchandise exports or about $415 billion. 77 metro areas posted export sales of over 1 billion. Also furnishes, for the 10 largest metro area exporters, extensive detail on the product composition of manufactured exports as well as export sales to selected major markets. The Detroit area was the nation's top exporting metropolis in 1994.




Metropolitan Areas


Book Description




Report


Book Description




Governing Metropolitan Areas


Book Description

Interest and research on regionalism has soared in the last decade. Local governments in metropolitan areas and civic organizations are increasingly engaged in cooperative and collaborative public policy efforts to solve problems that stretch across urban centers and their surrounding suburbs. Yet there remains scant attention in textbooks to the issues that arise in trying to address metropolitan governance. Governing Metropolitan Areas describes and analyzes structure to understand the how and why of regionalism in our global age. The book covers governmental institutions and their evolution to governance, but with a continual focus on institutions. David Hamilton provides the necessary comprehensive, in-depth description and analysis of how metropolitan areas and governments within metropolitan areas developed, efforts to restructure and combine local governments, and governance within the polycentric urban region. This second edition is a major revision to update the scholarship and current thinking on regional governance. While the text still provides background on the historical development and growth of urban areas and governments' efforts to accommodate the growth of metropolitan areas, this edition also focuses on current efforts to provide governance through cooperative and collaborative solutions. There is also now extended treatment of how regional governance outside the United States has evolved and how other countries are approaching regional governance.