

How Jane Jacobs got Americans stuck
19 snips Jul 9, 2025
Yoni Appelbaum, a Senior Editor at The Atlantic and author of "Stuck," delves into America's striking decline in mobility and its implications. He contrasts Jane Jacobs' urban planning ideas with those of Robert Moses, revealing how well-meaning policies have inadvertently trapped communities. The discussion highlights how local zoning laws perpetuate exclusion and stifle growth. They also explore how COVID-19 reshaped mobility desires and examine potential solutions for fostering a more inclusive and prosperous American landscape.
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Decline of American Mobility
- America's historic dynamism relied heavily on high migration rates, often about one-third moving annually.
- This mobility decline to European levels threatens economic opportunity and the American dream itself.
Jane Jacobs' Unintended Consequence
- Jane Jacobs' activism aimed to protect neighborhoods by giving residents veto power over developments.
- This shifted to widespread exclusion, preventing many housing changes and worsening mobility problems.
Worst of Jacobs and Moses Combined
- We've gotten the worst of both Jane Jacobs and Robert Moses' ideas.
- Cities suffer from neither enough infrastructure investment nor organic, diverse growth due to excessive veto powers.