Beyond Steel

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A01=Christopher P. Briem
Author_Christopher P. Briem
Braddock
Carnegie
Category=KCZ
Category=KN
deindustrialization
economic history
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_new_release
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
labor
mills
Monongahela Valley
postindustrial
reinvention
Rust Belt
urban
US Steel

Product details

  • ISBN 9781606355022
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 03 Feb 2026
  • Publisher: Kent State University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Learning from one Rust Belt city's postindustrial transition

While Pittsburgh is sometimes held up as a successful example of urban reinvention in the era after heavy industry (think "eds and meds"), its transition away from steel has in fact been uneven and contested. Christopher P. Briem grew up in the city's Bloomfield and South Side neighborhoods watching that process. Now a regional economist at the University of Pittsburgh, he has spent many years working in multiple registers to document economic change—through his academic research, as a public authority consulted nationally when Pittsburgh is in the news, and as a spirited participant in popular debates about what is still called the Steel City.

Beyond Steel collects Briem's encyclopedic knowledge of the city during and after its steelmaking heyday. Briem tells stories about the boundary between resilience and obstinacy, particularly as manifested in the ultimately unsuccessful pursuit of economic development through smokestack chasing. "Long before the 1980s arrived," he writes, "future prospects for Greater Pittsburgh had decoupled from the prospects of the American steel industry, a reality that to this day remains difficult to accept for a region so long identified with the seemingly monolithic industry." At once optimistic and cautious, Beyond Steel should help inform debates about how communities across the Rust Belt navigate issues of dynamism, heritage, and deindustrialization.

Christopher P. Briem is a regional economist with the program in Urban and Regional Analysis at the University of Pittsburgh's Center for Social and Urban Research. He has been widely quoted on Pittsburgh topics in regional and national outlets (including the Washington Post and the Wall Street Journal), and his research has been published in Economic Development Quarterly, Journal of Urban Regeneration and Renewal, Citiscape: A Journal of Policy Development and Research, and elsewhere.

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