Description
Book SynopsisThe Dream Revisited brings together a range of expert viewpoints on the causes and consequences of the nation’s separate and unequal living patterns. Leading scholars and practitioners, including civil rights advocates, affordable housing developers, elected officials, and fair housing lawyers, discuss responses to residential segregation.
Trade Review[
The Dream Revisited] is probably the most intelligent and thoughtful read on segregation in recent years. Despite highlighting so many debates and differences, I consider it a hopeful and useful policy tool. -- Anne B. Shlay, Georgia State University * Journal of Urban Affairs *
This well-organized book makes a significant contribution to recent research on housing segregation in the US. * Choice *
This book would be a great supplementary text for courses in planning, housing, sociology or geography. Not only does the book help us to understand the complexities of segregation and ways to deal with it, but just as important, Ellen and Steil show us how much we can learn from conversations with people with different viewpoints. -- David P. Varady, University of Cincinnati * Journal of Housing and the Built Environment *
Likely to be the leading reference point for discussion and action for years to come, this must-read volume offers pointed debate among a who’s who of scholars and practitioners. One would need a small library to cover so much critical terrain half as well. More importantly, the dozens of diverse contributors are willing to squarely face fundamental questions about whether racial and economic integration is, in fact, worthwhile for America and, if so, how it can be achieved at a time of dramatic social and technological change. -- Xavier de Souza Briggs, Vice President, Inclusive Economies and Markets, Ford Foundation
The deep engagement and spirited debate found in
The Dream Revisited make it a must-read for political leaders, housing advocates, and researchers seeking to understand the causes and consequences of segregation in America. Segregation anchors our nation’s schools, neighborhoods, and families in inequality. Through a wide range of perspectives penned by top scholars, Ellen and Steil’s volume helps us understand not only how we are divided but how we might finally address one of America’s most vexing problems. -- Matthew Desmond, author of
Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American CityFifty-five years since Martin Luther King’s speech, racial and economic segregation persist. Why?
The Dream Revisited is a compelling compilation of the most up-to-date research and policy debate on the most crucial question of our day: how to produce racial and economic equality. It is both a wonderful introduction to these intersecting fields and a great resource for scholars and students of these topics. -- Wendell E. Pritchett, Presidential Professor of Law and Education, University of Pennsylvania Law School
Table of ContentsAcknowledgments
Introduction
Part I: The Meaning of SegregationIntroduction
Discussion 1: Why Integration?
Discussion 2: Comparative Perspectives on Segregation
Discussion 3: Neighborhood Income Segregation
Discussion 4: Suburban Poverty and Segregation
Discussion 5: The Relationship Between Residential and School Segregation
Part II: Causes of Contemporary Racial SegregationIntroduction
Discussion 6: Ending Segregation: Our Progress Today
Discussion 7: The Stubborn Persistence of Racial Segregation
Discussion 8: Implicit Bias and Segregation
Part III: Consequences of SegregationIntroduction
Discussion 9: Explaining Ferguson Through Place and Race
Discussion 10: Segregation and Law Enforcement
Discussion 11: Segregation and Health
Discussion 12: Segregation and the Financial Crisis
Discussion 13: Segregation and Politics
Part IV: Policy ImplicationsIntroduction
Discussion 14: The Future of the Fair Housing Act
Discussion 15: Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing
Discussion 16: Balancing Investments in People and Place
Discussion 17: Addressing Neighborhood Disinvestment
Discussion 18: Place-Based Affirmative Action
Discussion 19: Selecting Neighborhoods for Low-Income Housing Tax Credit Developments
Discussion 20: Public Housing and Deconcentrating Poverty
Discussion 21: Creating Mixed-Income Housing Through Inclusionary Zoning
Discussion 22: Neighborhoods, Opportunities, and the Housing Choice Voucher Program
Discussion 23: Making Vouchers More Mobile
Discussion 24: Gentrification and the Promise of Integration
Discussion 25: Community Preferences and Fair Housing
Conclusion
Contributors
Index