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Native Baltimorean and professor of political science at the Johns Hopkins University, where he has been on the faculty for 33 years. He is the co-author (with Benjamin Ginsberg) of Downsizing Democracy: How America Sidelined Its Citizens and Privatized Its Public (2002) and author of Building the Invisible Orphanage: A Prehistory of the American Welfare System (1998) as well as Neighborhood Politics (1983), a study of grassroots politics in Baltimore.
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References
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SackRobert David1992Place, Modernity, and the Consumer's World: A Relational Framework for Geographic AnalysisBaltimoreJohns Hopkins University Press2953