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West Ashley Library
Closed (2024 - Labor Day)
Phone: (843) 766-6635
Folly Beach Library
Closed (2024 - Labor Day)
Phone: (843) 588-2001
Edgar Allan Poe/Sullivan's Island Library
Closed (2024 - Labor Day)
Phone: (843) 883-3914
Wando Mount Pleasant Library
Closed (2024 - Labor Day)
Phone: (843) 805-6888
Village Library
Closed (2024 - Labor Day)
Phone: (843) 884-9741
St. Paul's/Hollywood Library
Closed (2024 - Labor Day)
Phone: (843) 889-3300
Otranto Road Library
Closed (2024 - Labor Day)
Phone: (843) 572-4094
Mt. Pleasant Library
Closed (2024 - Labor Day)
Phone: (843) 849-6161
McClellanville Library
Closed (2024 - Labor Day)
Phone: (843) 887-3699
Keith Summey North Charleston Library
Closed (2024 - Labor Day)
Phone: (843) 744-2489
John's Island Library
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Phone: (843) 559-1945
Hurd/St. Andrews Library
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Phone: (843) 766-2546
Miss Jane's Building (Edisto Library Temporary Location)
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Phone: (843) 869-2355
Dorchester Road Library
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Phone: (843) 552-6466
John L. Dart Library
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Phone: (843) 722-7550
Baxter-Patrick James Island
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Phone: (843) 795-6679
Main Library
Closed (2024 - Labor Day)
Phone: (843) 805-6930
Bees Ferry West Ashley Library
Closed (2024 - Labor Day)
Phone: (843) 805-6892
Mobile Library
Closed (2024 - Labor Day)
Phone: (843) 805-6909
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Socioeconomic Growth, Culture Scale, and Household Well-Being.
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- Author(s): Bodley, John H.
- Source:
Current Anthropology; Dec1999, Vol. 40 Issue 5, p595-612, 18p, 1 Diagram, 3 Charts, 4 Graphs- Subject Terms:
- Source:
- Additional Information
- Abstract: Socioeconomic growth is an elite-directed process that concentrates social power in direct proportion to increases in culture scale. Power elites have controlled social power to their own advantage in at least three different ways; domestically, by means of kinship, politically, by means of rulers, and commercially, by means of the market. Each method produces its own growth trajectory and scale of culture and a distinctive distribution of elite power and household living standards. Ethnographic data on urban property ownership in 27 municipalities in the l'alouse region of eastern Washington suggest that when power is commercially organized and villages become towns and cities, there is a dramatic increase not only in the number of prosperous households but even more in the number of poor and maintenance-level households. Elite property owners, who most benefit from growth, assume a larger role in municipal government, where they can encourage further growth through municipal annexations and zoning changes. Thus, as elite power becomes increasingly concentrated, the growth process itself tends to become self-perpetuating. In the l'alouse example, small, no-growth municipalities appear to he politically more democratic than larger-scale, growing municipalities and household well-being in them more equitably distributed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Abstract:
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