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51.www.telegraaf.nl427000
52.www.aawsat.com427000
53.jacksonville.com424000
54.www.austinchronicle.com419000
55.www.netzeitung.de408000
56.www.theaustralian.news.com.au402000
57.www.syracuse.com402000
58.www.thestar.com395000
59.timesofindia.indiatimes.com391000
60.www.jsonline.com382000
61.www.chieftain.com381000
62.www.startribune.com380000
63.www.philly.com372000
64.www.gara.net368000
65.www.gazzetta.it366000
66.www.ajc.com364000
67.www.freep.com336000
68.www.lubbockonline.com327000
69.www.20minutos.es327000
70.www.pittsburghlive.com324000
71.www.svd.se324000
72.www.sacbee.com323000
73.www.lefigaro.fr323000
74.www.nrc.nl323000
75.staugustine.com318000
76.www.sltrib.com317000
77.www.mirror.co.uk311000
78.www.ireland.com307000
79.www.projo.com306000
80.www.sun-sentinel.com300000
81.www.ocregister.com300000
82.www.humanite.fr293000
83.observer.guardian.co.uk287000
84.seattletimes.nwsource.com284000
85.www.yomiuri.co.jp282000
86.www.mercurynews.com281000
87.www.azstarnet.com279000
88.www.lanacion.com.ar277000
89.www.larazon.es270000
90.www.rockymountainnews.com265000
91.www.jpost.com262000
92.www.elpais.es252000
93.www.nacion.com236000
94.www.washingtonpost.com235000
95.www.citypaper.com233000
96.www.guardian.co.uk233000
97.www.courier-journal.com222000
98.www.arabnews.com222000
99.www.telegraph.co.uk214000
100.www.tennessean.com213000
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87. www.azstarnet.com

Rating: 279000 points*
*amount mentions of word 'www.azstarnet.com' on the other websites

www.azstarnet.com

www.azstarnet.com

Description: StarNet, the online service of the Arizona Daily Star

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These cities within cities are eating up Britain's streets | Anna Minton
Urban regeneration has seen entire districts pass into the hands of private companies – and their security guardsThe Guardian reporter Paul Lewis, who fell foul of anti-terror legislation last week, is the latest in a long line of alleged miscreants stopped and questioned after straying on to private land. Lewis was stopped and searched by police under section 44 of the Terrorism Act for taking photographs of the Gherkin, one of London's landmark buildings.This monitoring and surveillance of innocent activities, which does not necessarily require anti-terror laws, is taking place all around Britain as a result of the growing private ownership and private control of cities. Liverpool One, which spans 34 streets in the heart of Liverpool, is effectively owned by the Duke of Westminster's property company, Grosvenor, which leased the entire site, including streets and public places, from the council for 250 years. Cabot Circus in Bristol, Highcross in Leicester and what promises to be the biggest of all, Stratford City in London, are all owned and run by property companies.These areas follow the model pioneered by Canary Wharf and the Broadgate Centre in London in the 1980s. Then, these districts were exceptional places, created to meet the needs of business. Now this is the template for all new development, large or small. With its 170 acres, Stratford City – one of the main sites for the 2012 Olympics – will be a private city within a city.In their defence, politicians and developers point out that people like these places and flock to shop in them. But they also raise a challenge to the kind of public life, culture and democracy that has been taken for granted in British cities for the last 150 years. A host of seemingly innocuous activities – skateboarding, rollerblading, even eating in some places – are routinely banned, along with filming and, of course, taking photographs. So is begging, homelessness, selling the Big Issue, handing out political leaflets, and holding political demonstrations. It's a very different and far less democratic idea of the city and citizenship. In place of the diversity of high streets we are creating sterile, high-security enclaves, policed by private security and CCTV. And rather than making us feel safer, the emphasis on security is a reminder of ever-present danger, fuelling fear of crime.The last decade has seen more construction in Britain than at any time since the 1960s. The industrial era, with its tower blocks and arterial roads, put its particular stamp on the country's cities, while the remarkable opportunities of the post-industrial period have seen riverfronts, docksides and former factory buildings offer themselves up for change. But just as the centralised planning of the modernist period had disturbing consequences, the regeneration of the noughties, bringing with it the private control of streets and public places, is no less concerning.Yet few people are aware of the changes literally underfoot. The assumption is that because the streets have always been public, they will continue to be so. In fact, during the early 19th century, before the advent of local government and local democracy, cities like London were owned by a small group of private landlords, mainly dukes and earls. Their old estates include some of the finest Georgian and early Victorian squares, but what we don't see today are the private security forces that were employed by the estates to keep out those who did not belong there – and the many gates, bars and posts.After growing public outrage, which paralleled the rise in local democracy and was reflected by two parliamentary inquiries, control of the streets passed over to local authorities. Since then it has been common for local authorities to "adopt" the streets and public spaces of the city, which means whether or not they actually own them, they control and run them. Now this is being reversed, as property firms assume control of entire districts. Photographers may be among the first to notice, but they are far from the only ones affected. But as people start to wake up to the consequences of these enclaves, can anything be done to reverse the trend? New thinking, from a perhaps unexpected quarter, may be at hand.It seems ironic that the headquarters of the Greater London Authority, the seat of democratic government in London, is in More London, another privately owned and controlled enclave. However, last month mayor Boris Johnson published his "manifesto for public space", in which he explicitly states his opposition to the private control of streets and public spaces. He also points to the development at King's Cross where, unusually, the local authority is retaining control of the streets. "This has established an important principle that should be negotiated in all similar schemes," he says.The mayor has considerable planning powers, and can direct boroughs to refuse permission for new schemes that do not meet these criteria. Given that virtually all new development is quietly allowing the control of streets to pass into private hands, this is a significant policy statement. It is up to us to make sure he acts on it.Planning policyPropertyLocal governmentLocal politicsBoris JohnsonAnna Mintonguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk
Century duo seal series for India
Gautam Gambhir and Virat Kohli hit centuries as India beat Sri Lanka to wrap up a series victory.
news.bbc.co.uk
Row over SA king's secession bid
A tribal king plunges South Africa into a constitutional row after he threatens to secede - and take 60% of the country with him.
news.bbc.co.uk
Ukraine presidential hopefuls fear election fraud
KIEV, Ukraine (AP) -- In the final hours of the Ukraine's bitterly fought presidential campaign, candidates accused one another of planning to commit campaign fraud and experts warned of the possibility of post-election unrest....
hosted.ap.org
Fresh start?
Sri Lanka holds its most important poll in two decades
news.bbc.co.uk