A useful bibliographic source containing 128 items, some of which have been listed already, and how to access several databases is Christine M. Sala _Edge Cities_ Council of Planning Librarians, 1995 CPL Bibliography 317. Ms. Sala is with Avery Architectural and Fine Arts Library Columbia University. This report is available from either Council of Planning Librarians 114 North Aberdeen Chicago, IL 60607-2004 USA or from American Planning Association Bookstore 122 South Michigan Avenue, Suite 1600 Chicago, IL 60603-6107. It is ISBN # 0-86602-317-8. BTW, those not living in either the US or Canada may be somewhat mystified by the assumption in most of this discussion that inner cities have poor people while suburbs have rich people. I note for those in the US and Canada (OZ is a mixed bag on this, I think) that in places where cities did not basically develop since the introduction of the automobile, that is Europe, Asia, Africa, Central America, South America, etc. that the pattern tends to be the opposite: the rich live downtown and the suburbs are poor/working class. One sees the suburban shantytowns without infrastructure on the edges of many LDC cities. In Europe, one has places like Paris where the mayor was for many years the Gaullist, Jacques Chirac. The "Red Belt" is the ring of suburbs from St. Denis in the north east through La Corneuve and Villejuif to Malakoff in the south where even today there are streets named after Marx, Lenin, Robespierre, Stalingrad, and Yuri Gagarin. The same pattern even holds in Moscow where the nomenklatura lives downtown and the suburbs are full of workers. Barkley Rosser PS: RIP, the real Christopher Robin (Milne), an environmental activist