Since reunification, Berlin planners have sought to find a niche for a postindustrial New Berlin integrated into Europe. While great scholarly attention has focused on the grand projects that have dominated the reconstruction of the city's government and downtown commercial districts, only lesser attention has been paid to the city's housing and social policies. This article seeks to identify the extent to which Berlin planners have permitted unabated market-led redevelopment to proceed and to what extent local policy has sought more balanced redevelopment and the ''European city'' ideal. The article looks at gentrifying Prenzlauer Berg, in eastern Berlin, to assess the extent to which public policy measures can be expected to constrain and temper, and not just promote, gentrification. The role played by community development organizations in mediating development is observed. The impact of the city's fiscal crisis and slack housing market are also noted.
French urban planning and politics has moved away from traditional spatial and social policy goals toward a new politics of local economic development. The roots of this transformation are found in such factors as local economic distress, European unification, enhanced global and intercity competition, political decentralization, and a change in Socialist party ideology away from its previous anticapitalist stance to a pragmatic, probusiness point of view. Growth coalitions in France and the United States are compared in an effort to identify the roots and structures of growth regimes.
The results of banding of the pulmonary artery in 111 children with cardiac malformations associated with excessive pulmonary blood flow are presented. Thirty-three of these children died, eleven either of late band complications or after a corrective operation. Patients with ventricular septal defect represent the largest group of malformation among the 111 patients.The overall mortality for banding in patients with isolated ventricular septal defect is 10%, as compared to 36% in patients with ventricular septal defect complicated by an associated lesion. In all infants with ventricular septal defect banded under age 3 months the mortality is 59%, as compared to a mortality of 21% in those banded after age 3 months and only 7% if banded after age 1 year. The overall mortality figures for pulmonary arterial banding have not changed appreciably since 1966; future improvement in banding mortality will depend on improved postoperative management of these infants.Serial hemodynamic studies in patients banded under the age of 2 years have shown a fall in the pulmonary resistance toward normal, with none showing a progression of pulmonary vascular disease. In several patients thickening of the pulmonary valve occurred as a complication of banding.
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