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Published byJack Jenkins Modified over 8 years ago
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Aim: Why is there such disparity here in the core of the world system? Do Now: Describe the “inner city”
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…your education? …your job? …how you spend your free time? …your health?
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Where is this?
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Racial Compo- sition 1900195019902010 White97.2%82.8%28.6%26.3% - Non- Hispanic n/a 16.5%11.6% Black2.7%17.158.5%52.4% Hispanicn/a 26.1%33.8% Asian0.1% 1.2%1.6%
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© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
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Video (4:30): Post-WWII housing discrimination practices Video Real estate developers and banks contributed to the growth of urban ghettos and sometimes profited from it Blockbusting ▪ Real estate agents and developers used racism to “bust up” a block by bringing in a minority family and profiting from the ensuing real estate turnover Racial steering ▪ Real estate agents would steer people to buy a home in a neighborhood based on their race Redlining ▪ Banks would refuse to give loans to certain minority-occupied neighborhoods
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Richmond “Residential Security Map”Residential Security Map Compare to 2010 Census map showing racial and ethnic distribution in Richmond2010 Census map
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Video (2:11): Introduction to the Newark in 1967 Video Video (4:13): How housing practices were a root cause of the riots Video How does racial segregation affect public policy?
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What would it take to get you to move to Newark?
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© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Urban Renewal –Rebuilding neighborhoods –Cities identify blighted inner-city neighborhoods, acquire properties, relocate residents/businesses, clear the site and build new roads and utilities, which leads to new buildings/services
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© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Commercialization Transforming the CBD into an area that is attractive to residents and tourists
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© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. City Council approved the rezoning of 125th Street, Harlem’s central artery, to allow for high-rise office towers and some 2,100 new market-rate condominiums. About 70 small businesses might be closed and some residents displaced. In East Harlem, East River Plaza, a $300 million shopping mall anchored by Home Depot, is being built on the site of a long-abandoned wire factory. Two blocks away, glass-walled $1 million condominiums are rising next to six-story tenement buildings. Gentrification in Harlem
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POSITIVE Nicer buildings Higher property values Increased tax base Lower crime Jobs Better schools Diversity NEGATIVE Original residents priced out of housing market and displaced Lower-income residents become economically and socially marginalized Tension and conflict between community members
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© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Gentrification The process by which middle-class people move into deteriorated inner-city neighborhoods and renovate the housing. Middle class-families attracted by some of the following: »Houses may have more architectural character than those in the suburbs. »Proximity to cultural and recreational activities »Commuting time reduced to CBD Discussion: What do you think are the negative impacts of gentrification? The positive ones?impacts gentrification
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Transforms lands from rural to urban uses About ½ of U.S. lives in suburbs (2000) Causes: Post-WWII Cars Roads Government policies Effects Shopping centers Industrial parks Office complexes Edge cities Self-sufficient urban villages on the outskirts of a city near a major road/highway ▪ Offer workplace, shopping, leisure activities…
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James Vance (1960s) Based on San Francisco Suburban regions functionally tied to mixed- use, edge cities/suburban downtowns with relative independence from the CBD Grew out of Multiple-Nuclei Model Nuclei evolved into independently functioning “urban realms”
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“…suburbs have become the essence of the modern American city.” – Fouberg p. 262 Metropolitan statistical area (MSA) Includes a central city and all of its immediately interacting counties with commuters and people directly connected with central city Minimum 50,000 people Boundaries of MSAs often overlap E.g., Raleigh, Durham, Chapel Hill, NC “Research Triangle” Megalopolis Massive, overlapping, integrating metropolitan areas
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Northeast Corridor or “BosWash” Megalopolis
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Los Angeles
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A consequence of suburbanization Unrestricted growth of housing, commercial developments, and roads with little attention to urban planning
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Social Isolation/lack of community, lack of free time due to long commute, alienation due to lack of local culture Economic Costs of car and commuting: $ and productivity Environmental Car pollution, loss of natural landscapes Health Stress, car accidents, obesity
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Social class Proximity of similarly priced houses Land uses Zoning ordinances separate residential areas from commercial/manufacturing activities Gated communities Fenced-in neighborhoods: separation increases housing values Emphasis on safety
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A movement to bring together trends in healthy living, sustainable growth, and urban development Planned communities Walkable Recreational areas ▪ Faneuil Hall = “festival marketplace” ▪ Normal, IL
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