Recent works

  • Alex-Assensoh, Y. M. 2004. “Taking the Sanctuary to the Streets: Religion, Race, and Community Development in Columbus, Ohio.” The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 594:79.
  • Arum, R. 2000. “Schools and communities: Ecological and institutional dimensions.” Annual Review of Sociology 26:395-418.
  • Betancur, J. J., and D. C. Gills. 2004. “Community Development in Chicago: From Harold Washington to Richard M. Daley.” The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 594:92.
  • Clark, Terry N. 2004. The City as an Entertainment Machine. Research in Urban Policy, Vol. 9, Oxford: JAI/Elsevier.
  • Clark, Terry N. 2007. “Making Culture Into Magic: How Can It Bring Tourists and Residents?” International Review of Public Administration. 12(1):13-25.
  • Clark, Terry N. with Richard Lloyd, Kenneth K. Wong, and Pushpam Jain. 2002. “Amenities Drive Urban Growth.” Journal of Urban Affairs. Vol. 24,No. 5, pp. 493-515.
  • Cordero-Guzman, H., N. Martin, V. Quiroz-Becerra, and N. Theodore. 2008. “Voting With Their Feet: Nonprofit Organizations and Immigrant Mobilization.” American Behavioral Scientist 52:598.
  • Cordero-Guzman, H. R. 2004. “Interorganizational networks among community-based organizations.” Communities and Workforce Development:411.
  • Cordero-Guzman, H.R. 2005. “Community-based organisations and migration in New York City.” Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 31:889-909.
  • DiMaggio, P. J., and H. K. Anheier. 1990. “The Sociology of Nonprofit Organizations and Sectors.” Annual Reviews in Sociology 16:137-159.
  • Eric Fong, Wenhong Chen, and Chiu Luk 2007. “A Comparison of Ethnic Businesses in Suburbs and the City.”City and Community. 6(2):119-136.
  • Eric Fong and Chiu Luk (ed). 2007. Chinese Ethnic Business: Global and Local Perspectives. London, UK: Routledge
  • Eric Fong, Chiu Luk, and Emi Ooka. 2005. “Spatial Distribution of Suburban Ethnic Businesses.” Social Science Research 34(1): 215-235.
  • Eric Fong and Kumiko Shibuya. 2005. “Multi-Ethnic Cities in North America.” Annual Review of Sociology 31:285-304.
  • Gittell, R., and M. Wilder. 1999. “Community Development Corporations: Critical Factors That Influence Success.” Journal of Urban Affairs 21:341-361.
  • Guthrie, D., and M. McQuarrie. 2008. “Providing for the Public Good: Corporate-Community Relations in the Era of the Receding Welfare State.” City & Community 7:113-139.
  • Kirkpatrick, L. O. 2007. “The Two” Logics” of Community Development: Neighborhoods, Markets, and Community Development Corporations.” Politics & Society 35:329.
  • Mari Gallagher Research and Consulting Group. 2009. The Chicago Food Desert Progress Report.
  • Marwell, Nicole P. 2007. Bargaining for Brooklyn: Community Organizations in the Entrepreneurial City. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • Marwell, Nicole P. 2004. “Privatizing the Welfare State: Nonprofit Community-Based Organizations as Political Actors.” American Sociological Review. 69: 265-291.
  • McDonough, Shelley. 2007. Risky Business: An Examination of Firm Location Decisions and Their Implications for Inner Cities. Unpublished dissertation. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
  • McRoberts, Omar. 2003. Streets of Glory: Church and Community in a Black Urban Neighborhood. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • Reckhow, Sarah. 2009. “The Distinct Patterns of Organized and Elected Representation of Racial and Ethnic Groups.Urban Affairs Review
  • Small, Mario L. 2004. Villa Victoria: The Transformation of Social Capital in a Boston Barrio. Chicago:University of Chicago Press.
  • Small, Mario L. 2006. “Neighborhood Institutions as Resource Brokers: Childcare Centers, Inter-Organizational Ties, and Resource Access among the Poor.”Social Problems. 53(2):274-92.
  • Small, Mario L. 2007. “Is There Such a Thing as ‘The Ghetto’? The Perils of Assuming that the South Side of Chicago Represents Poor Black Neighborhoods.” 2007. 11(3):413-21.
  • Small, Mario L. 2009. Unanticipated Gains: Origins of Network Inequality in Everyday Life. New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Small, M. L., E. M. Jacobs, and R. P. Massengill. 2008. “Why Organizational Ties Matter for Neighborhood Effects: Resource Access through Childcare Centers.” Social Forces 87:28.
  • Small, Mario L. and Monica McDermott. 2006. “The Presence of Organizational Resources in Poor Urban Neighborhoods: An Analysis of Average and Contextual Effects.”Social Forces. 84(3): 1697-1724.
  • Small, Mario L. and Laura Stark. 2005. “Are Poor Neighborhoods Resource-Deprived? A Case Study of Childcare Centers in New York.”Social Science Quarterly. 86(s1):1013-36.
  • Watkins-Hayes, Celeste. 2009. The New Welfare Bureaucrats: Entanglements of Race, Class, and Policy Reform. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • Zhong, Xing, Terry Nichols Clark and Saskia Sassen. 2007. “Globalization,Producer Services and Income Inequality Across US Metro Areas,”International Review of Sociology. Vol. 17(3):385.
  • Zhou, Min. 2005. “Ethnicity as Social Capital: Community-Based Institutions and Embedded Networks of Social Relations.” Pp. 131-159 in Glenn Loury, Tariq Modood, and Steven Teles, eds., Ethnicity, Social Mobility, and Public Policy in the United States and United Kingdom. London: Cambridge University Press.
  • Zhou, Min and Rebecca Kim. 2006. “The Paradox of Ethnicization and Assimilation: The Development of Ethnic Organizations in the Chinese Immigrant Community in the United States.” Pp. 231-252 in Kuah-Pearce Khun Eng and Evelyn Hu-DeHart, eds., Voluntary Organizations in the Chinese Diaspora. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press.
  • Zhou, Min and Susan S. Kim. 2006. “Community Forces, Social Capital, and Educational Achievement: The Case of Supplementary Education in the Chinese and Korean Immigrant Communities.” Harvard Educational Review 76 (1): 1-29.
  • Zhou, Min. Forthcoming. “The Ethnic System of Supplementary Education: Non-profit and For-profit Institutions in Los Angeles’ Chinese Immigrant Community.” In Beth Shinn and Hirokazu Yoshikawa, eds., Changing Schools and Community Organizations to Foster Positive Youth Development (tentative title). Oxford University Press.
  • Zhou, Min. “How Do Neighborhoods Matter for Immigrant Children? The Formation of Educational Resources in Chinatown, Koreatown, and Pico Union, Los Angeles.” Under review in Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies.

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