Racial justice in American land use /

Over a century after racial zoning was invalidated, American land use remains racially unjust. When racist tools were abolished, other facially neutral tools were created or adapted to maintain white power and wealth. Policies, practices, and laws evolved to embed racial inequality and white suprema...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Arnold, Craig Anthony, 1965- (Editor), Powell, Cedric Merlin, 1961- (Editor), Fosl, Catherine (Editor), Rothstein, Laura F. (Editor)
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2025.
Subjects:
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Summary:Over a century after racial zoning was invalidated, American land use remains racially unjust. When racist tools were abolished, other facially neutral tools were created or adapted to maintain white power and wealth. Policies, practices, and laws evolved to embed racial inequality and white supremacy deeply into institutional structures and landscapes. Despite modest improvements since the early twentieth century, land use and neighborhood conditions for Black people and other people of color remain dramatically worse than for whites. Discrimination and segregation persist. This enduring and multi-faceted nature of racial injustice in the American land use system means that there is no one cause and no one solution. Instead, this book advocates for nuanced systemic change. Using cross-disciplinary analysis in social-movement history, legal theory, and public policy, the authors call for a racial-justice transformation that integrates grassroots racial-justice activism, newly revitalized anti-subordination legal theories, and many different public policy reforms.
Physical Description:xiii, 276 pages 24 cm.
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:9781108477802
1108477801