Browsing by Subject "Public Housing"
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Item Deconcentrating Poverty in Minneapolis: Hollman v. Cisner. Report No. 3: Baseline Data Analysis for North Side Redevelopment.(Minneapolis: Center for Urban and Regional Affairs (CURA), 2001) Goetz, Edward GItem Deconcentrating Poverty in Minneapolis: Hollman v. Cisner. Report No. 4: Changes to the Public Housing Stock in Minneapolis.(Minneapolis: Center for Urban and Regional Affairs (CURA), 2001) Goetz, Edward GItem Deconcentrating Poverty in Minneapolis: Hollman v. Cisneros, Reports 1-8.(Minneapolis: Center for Urban and Regional Affairs (CURA), 2002) Goetz, Edward GItem Deconcentrating Poverty in Minneapolis: Hollman v. Cisneros. Report No. 1: Policy Context and Previous Research on Housing Dispersal.(Minneapolis: Center for Urban and Regional Affairs (CURA), 2002) Goetz, Edward GItem Deconcentrating Poverty in Minneapolis: Hollman v. Cisneros. Report No. 2: Planning for North Side Redevelopment.(Minneapolis: Center for Urban and Regional Affairs (CURA), 2002) Goetz, Edward GItem Deconcentrating Poverty in Minneapolis: Hollman v. Cisneros. Report No. 5: Relocation of Residents from North Side Public Housing.(Minneapolis: Center for Urban and Regional Affairs (CURA), 2001) Goetz, Edward GItem Deconcentrating Poverty in Minneapolis: Hollman v. Cisneros. Report No. 6: The Experiences of Dispersed Families.(Minneapolis: Center for Urban and Regional Affairs (CURA), 2002) Goetz, Edward GItem Deconcentrating Poverty in Minneapolis: Hollman v. Cisneros. Report No. 7: Mobility Certificates.(Minneapolis: Center for Urban and Regional Affairs (CURA), 2001) Goetz, Edward GItem Deconcentrating Poverty in Minneapolis: Hollman v. Cisneros. Report No. 8: Replacement Housing.(Minneapolis: Center for Urban and Regional Affairs (CURA), 2001) Goetz, Edward GItem From Vice to Nice: Race, Sex, and the Gentrification of AIDS(2017-04) Esparza, ReneMy dissertation, From Vice to Nice: Race, Sex, and the Gentrification of AIDS, tracks the agency of white gay leaders in shaping urban politics in the 1980s vis-à-vis the racialization of public health discourses and practices. In the context of state indifference spurred by the HIV/AIDS epidemic, these leaders embraced racialized norms of sexual hygiene to articulate their Americanness. Because early in the epidemic, the racially coded language of public health represented the gay community as a threat to white Americans, gay community activists learned that meeting institutionalized-defined standards of moral health and sexual hygiene was a precondition for their social membership. However, in testifying on behalf of the gay community’s moral cleanliness, these leaders sublimated fears of perverse spaces, atypical gender roles, and deviant sexualities onto communities of color. Under neoliberalism, I argue that these racialized norms of sexual hygiene stood as yardsticks for Americanization. I underscore that racialized norms of sexual hygiene provided for the anesthetization and co-optation of gay radical politics and, in turn, gave form to what Lisa Duggan calls “homonormativity,” the normalization of white, middle-class class gay and lesbian politics of sexual respectability. Specifically, through a case study of the Twin Cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul, I uncover how homonormativity converged with wider agendas and policies encompassing the “cleaning-up” of public urban spaces such as low-income neighborhoods and vice districts, and the policing of its racial denizens such as “crack-addicted” single black mothers, Hmong refugees, and Native American sex workers. Using multiple methods, including archival research, ethnographic fieldwork, and discourse analysis, I illustrate that public health constructions of normative gender, sexuality, and domestic space became powerfully intertwined with private development so that both institutions worked in the service of promoting the economically prosperous potential of post-industrial inner-cities as centers of business, culture, and tourism. Gentrification, I conclude, does not simply denote the privatization of public urban spaces. It also reflects attempts at the privatization of non-normative sexuality in the service of reorganizing white heteronormativity.Item Multi-Family Rental Housing Review Greater Longfellow 2005(2006) Karki, AvigyaItem Navigating a Gentrifying Neighborhood: Examining the Impact of a HOPE VI Mixed Income Housing Development on the Social Connectedness of Young People(2020-07) Calhoun, MollyNeighborhood redevelopment creates inevitable disruption in the lives of young people, particularly through the demolition of social communities. For almost 30 years, public housing neighborhoods have been completely demolished to make way for mixed income housing developments in increasingly coveted urban spaces. The mixed income housing model, a form of state-sponsored gentrification, increases investment in historically disinvested areas and socially and economically “mixes” residents across racial and economic lines. This study examined the effect of a HOPE VI mixed income redevelopment process in the South Lincoln public housing development in Denver, Colorado, on the social connections of youth. Young people’s experiences of residential transition and social connectedness were examined through constructivist grounded theory, as well as a combination of descriptive statistics, egocentric social network analysis and geographic information systems (GIS) mapping to assess the size, strength, and spatial nature of social connections. Eighteen young people described the redevelopment as gentrification that was driven by race, profit, and power. They illuminated the loss of home as a reinforcement of harm through neighborhood redevelopment, continued social connection despite diminished community connectedness, and overall nuances from sharing their own story. The findings illustrate the critical nature of centering young people through social justice initiatives and investments as well as the integration of critical race theory as a perspective that informs the model of mixed income housing.