b/ebook-lover by olafur

Root Shock: How Tearing Up City Neighborhoods Hurts America, and What We Can Do About It

This post was published 9 years ago. Download links are most likely obsolete. If that's the case, try asking the uploader to re-upload.

Root Shock: How Tearing Up City Neighborhoods Hurts America, and What We Can Do About It

by Mindy Fullilove
English | November 15, 2016 | ISBN: 0345454227, 1613320191 | EPUB | pages | 16.9 MB

Like a sequel to the prescient warnings of urbanist Jane Jacobs, Dr. Mindy Thompson Fullilove reveals the disturbing outcome of decades of urban renewal projects to communities of color. For those whose homes and neighborhoods were bulldozed, the urban modernization projects that swept America starting in 1949 were nothing short of an assault. Vibrant city blocks—places rich in culture—were torn apart by freeways and other invasive development, blatantly devastating the lives of poor residents.
Fullilove passionately describes the profound traumatic stress—the “root shock”—that results when a neighborhood is demolished. She estimates that federal and state urban renewal programs, spearheaded by business and real estate interests, destroyed 1,600 African American districts in cities across the United States. But urban renewal didn’t just disrupt black communities: the anger it caused led to riots that sent whites fleeing for the suburbs, stripping them of their sense of place as well. It also left big gashes in the centers of cities that are only now slowly being repaired.