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・ Anaheim Aces
・ Anaheim Amigos
・ Anaheim Arsenal
・ Anaheim Ballet
・ Anaheim Bolts
・ Anaheim Bullfrogs
・ Anaheim Canyon station
・ Anaheim City School District
・ Anaheim Convention Center
・ Anaheim Ducks
・ Anaheim Fire & Rescue
・ Anaheim GardenWalk
・ Anaheim High School
・ Anaheim Hills, Anaheim, California
・ Anaheim Ice
Anaheim Island, California
・ Anaheim Kingsmen Drum and Bugle Corps
・ Anaheim Packing House
・ Anaheim Piranhas
・ Anaheim Plaza
・ Anaheim Police Department
・ Anaheim Regional Medical Center
・ Anaheim Regional Transportation Intermodal Center
・ Anaheim Resort Transportation
・ Anaheim Resort, Anaheim, California
・ Anaheim Splash
・ Anaheim Sports
・ Anaheim Storm
・ Anaheim Street (Los Angeles Metro station)
・ Anaheim Union High School District


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Anaheim Island, California : ウィキペディア英語版
Anaheim Island, California

Anaheim Island (also known as Anaheim West, Southwest Anaheim, and Garza Island) consists of several unincorporated neighborhoods located in the northwestern part of Orange County, California, United States. Established between the 1910s and 1960s, the neighborhoods are bounded by the cities of Anaheim to the east, north and west, Stanton to the southwest, and Garden Grove to the south. The Orange County Board of Supervisors has referred to these unincorporated areas as "Anaheim Island" while Orange County LAFCO has referred to them variously as "Anaheim West" and "Southwest Anaheim."〔 〕 The Anaheim City Planning Commission refers to the entire area in the singular as the "Garza Island." Some local residents refer to the area as the "Gaza Strip."
==History==
After World War II, Orange County experienced dramatic growth, the formation of many new municipalities, and the expansion of existing municipalities through annexation of neighboring county territory. With economic development driving expansion, cities sought to annex prosperous neighborhoods and commercial districts; neighborhoods that were less prosperous, neighborhoods with older housing stock and large families drawn by its affordability, and neighborhoods largely populated by Mexicans found themselves bypassed by city governments reluctant to provide services to aging residential districts, or to increase their minority population. Cities set their sights on the most economically productive or promising county territory; in turn, many residents of unincorporated areas resisted potential tax increases, sought to preserve community identity, and sought to preserve perceived (and often disputed) advantages of their neighborhoods' unincorporated status. Thus was born the phenomenon of the county island, either partially or wholly surrounded by municipal territory.
Since the 1960s, the unincorporated neighborhoods of west Orange County that fall within Anaheim's sphere of influence have been colloquially called the "Gaza Strip"〔 or, more recently, the "Garza Strip." Both nicknames allude to Garza Avenue, the area's oldest and southernmost street; the area's strip-like shape; and its popularity as a dragstrip frequented by scofflaws cognizant of the county sheriff's jurisdiction and delays in response to complaints to law enforcement resulting from the distance sheriffs must travel to reach the area. Additionally, the word "Gaza" alludes to the area's unincorporated status, similar to that of the Gaza Strip in Palestine.
The mid-1990s witnessed an influx of Middle Eastern immigrants into west Anaheim, with many businesses serving the Arab American population established on a stretch of Brookhurst Street adjacent to the unincorporated areas. This migration has earned the commercial district the nickname Little Gaza, which conflates the unincorporated area's "Gaza Strip" nickname with the "Little (place name)" naming convention for ethnic enclaves. Although "Gaza Strip" is also occasionally used to describe the Brookhurst Street corridor, the term predates the arrival of significant numbers of Middle Eastern immigrants to the area.
A local urban legend has it that a fire once broke out in one of the unincorporated areas near an Anaheim city fire station, and that firemen on duty witnessed the fire but allowed the structure to burn since it was not within their jurisdiction. Although the story's veracity is questionable, its existence is generally indicative of the disputes that have often arisen between residents of unincorporated, marginalized neighborhoods in urbanized areas and the cities that surround them.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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