This article examines newspapers, government records, sociological studies, and the personal papers of elites to argue that black Washingtonians helped to stigmatize and ghettoize D.C.'s African-American community during the Depression. Black residents in the nation's capital especially characterized the working- and under-class populations, who resided in inner-city wards, as menaces to public health, safety and prosperity. Working- and middle-class blacks who flocked to new "colored" suburbs also participated in the government and market driven efforts to maintain racially-segregated housing during this time
Economic disparity between urban white America and urban black America is becoming more pronounced, ...
National fair housing legislation opened up higher opportunity neighborhoods to multitudes of middle...
cities and communities are still suffering from the legacy of this sharp economic decline. During th...
This article examines newspapers, government records, sociological studies, and the personal papers ...
Major scholars in the field of urban poverty, notably William Julius Wilson, suggest that the contem...
Journal ArticleThis article examines how residence in racially segregated neighborhoods affected the...
The thesis focuses on the role of race and poverty programs in influencing the housing market in the...
This article examines the largely neglected history of African American struggles to obtain housing ...
Black women have constituted a significant portion of the labor force in northern urban black commun...
Using qualitative data, including extensive interview material and ethnographic research, to explore...
The trend of mass suburbanization that followed World War II led to increasing segregation and inequ...
More than a year after the tragic shooting death of Michael Brown in Ferguson Missouri by a white po...
In this article, I argue that the demographic and political restructuring of city−suburb dynamics in...
On May 15, 1911, Baltimore Mayor J. Barry Mahool signed into law an ordinance for “preserving the pe...
In her Article, Professor Wiggins discusses the complex social phenomenon of Black suburbanization,...
Economic disparity between urban white America and urban black America is becoming more pronounced, ...
National fair housing legislation opened up higher opportunity neighborhoods to multitudes of middle...
cities and communities are still suffering from the legacy of this sharp economic decline. During th...
This article examines newspapers, government records, sociological studies, and the personal papers ...
Major scholars in the field of urban poverty, notably William Julius Wilson, suggest that the contem...
Journal ArticleThis article examines how residence in racially segregated neighborhoods affected the...
The thesis focuses on the role of race and poverty programs in influencing the housing market in the...
This article examines the largely neglected history of African American struggles to obtain housing ...
Black women have constituted a significant portion of the labor force in northern urban black commun...
Using qualitative data, including extensive interview material and ethnographic research, to explore...
The trend of mass suburbanization that followed World War II led to increasing segregation and inequ...
More than a year after the tragic shooting death of Michael Brown in Ferguson Missouri by a white po...
In this article, I argue that the demographic and political restructuring of city−suburb dynamics in...
On May 15, 1911, Baltimore Mayor J. Barry Mahool signed into law an ordinance for “preserving the pe...
In her Article, Professor Wiggins discusses the complex social phenomenon of Black suburbanization,...
Economic disparity between urban white America and urban black America is becoming more pronounced, ...
National fair housing legislation opened up higher opportunity neighborhoods to multitudes of middle...
cities and communities are still suffering from the legacy of this sharp economic decline. During th...