
This work invites listeners to explore how sociology can move beyond theory and become a hands‑on guide for city‑builders and civic leaders. It argues that the study of urban life should be rooted in direct observation, turning everyday experience into a systematic science that informs public service. By following the author’s “panoramic and impressionist” surveys of towns and cities, you’ll see how patterns emerge from simple travel notes to a coherent regional picture. The goal is to show that civic action, when grounded in solid social data, can evolve into a disciplined art of community improvement.
The book then turns to practical methods for conducting these surveys, using London’s pioneering social mapping as a benchmark while acknowledging its limits. It proposes a framework of “Sociological Observatories” and “Laboratories” where statistics, demography, and even emerging ideas about eugenics intersect with policy and planning. Through vivid examples of regional studies—from remote mountain villages to bustling railway towns—you’ll learn how to translate raw data into effective civic strategies. The approach promises a clearer, more ordered way to understand and shape the cities we live in.
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (243K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Jon Ingram, Wilelmina Mallière and Distributed Proofreaders Europe, http://dp.rastko.net.
Release date
2004-08-17
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1854–1932
A visionary Scottish thinker who linked biology, society, and the shape of cities, he became one of the key early voices in modern town planning. His work ranged from science and education to bold ideas about how places should grow around the people who live in them.
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