Facing Segregation: Housing Policy Solutions for a Stronger Society
Editat de Molly W. Metzger, Henry S. Webberen Limba Engleză Hardback – 17 ian 2019
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190862305
ISBN-10: 0190862300
Pagini: 276
Dimensiuni: 239 x 157 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0190862300
Pagini: 276
Dimensiuni: 239 x 157 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
Facing Segregation: Housing Policy Solutions for a Stronger Society is an excellent volume of essays on pragmatic, evidence-based policy prescriptions for combatting racial and economic residential segregation in the United States. Editors Molly W. Metzger and Henry S.Webber have assembled a cohesive,complementary, and comprehensive collection of background essays and forwardthinking policy proposals.
Metzger and Webber have edited materials from a 2015 conference on inclusive housing hosted at the Center for Social Development in the Brown School of Social Work at Washington University in St. Louis where they are on faculty. Their book is about residential segregation in America, its harms, and potential solutions. It advocates for the social value of integration that they call living together-the intentional racial and economic desegregation of American communities to promote economic growth, strengthen democracy, and enhance equal opportunity.
With so many excellent compilations coinciding with or commemorating the fiftieth anniversary of the Fair Housing Act, Facing Segregation isa compelling volume. The editors' goal is to "contribute to making the United States a country where people live together in neighborhoods that are racially and economically diverse..." ...Despite the ritualistic handwringing to which we have grown accustomed, several features of this book strike me as exceptional, noteworthy, and, indeed, inspiring.
For those who believe that racial segregation in cities is solely the product of 'individual prejudices' and choices, this volume of essays reintroduces us to how our country's housing policies intentionally manufactured segregation to retain race and class hierarchies, a legacy that our neighborhoods still reflect 154 years removed from a race-based servitude economy.
Edited and written by distinguished scholars, Facing Segregation makes a brilliant and comprehensive case for why continuing racial and economic segregation is harmful to the nation, and promotes policies that can be effective in creating more inclusionary communities, ones that benefit all Americans.
Metzger and Webber have edited materials from a 2015 conference on inclusive housing hosted at the Center for Social Development in the Brown School of Social Work at Washington University in St. Louis where they are on faculty. Their book is about residential segregation in America, its harms, and potential solutions. It advocates for the social value of integration that they call living together-the intentional racial and economic desegregation of American communities to promote economic growth, strengthen democracy, and enhance equal opportunity.
With so many excellent compilations coinciding with or commemorating the fiftieth anniversary of the Fair Housing Act, Facing Segregation isa compelling volume. The editors' goal is to "contribute to making the United States a country where people live together in neighborhoods that are racially and economically diverse..." ...Despite the ritualistic handwringing to which we have grown accustomed, several features of this book strike me as exceptional, noteworthy, and, indeed, inspiring.
For those who believe that racial segregation in cities is solely the product of 'individual prejudices' and choices, this volume of essays reintroduces us to how our country's housing policies intentionally manufactured segregation to retain race and class hierarchies, a legacy that our neighborhoods still reflect 154 years removed from a race-based servitude economy.
Edited and written by distinguished scholars, Facing Segregation makes a brilliant and comprehensive case for why continuing racial and economic segregation is harmful to the nation, and promotes policies that can be effective in creating more inclusionary communities, ones that benefit all Americans.
Notă biografică
Molly W. Metzger, PhD, is assistant professor in the Brown School at Washington University in St. Louis. Dr. Metzger's research focuses on public policy, structural racism, and residential segregation in the United States. She is a community-engaged scholar, working with housing advocates in the St. Louis region to bring an evidence-based approach to activism.Henry S. (Hank) Webber, MPP, is executive vice chancellor and chief administrative officer at Washington University in St. Louis. He is also professor of practice at the Brown School and the School of Architecture and Urban Design. Mr. Webber's research and writing center on community development, mixed-income housing, racial and economic segregation, and the role of anchor institutions in urban development.