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Racial Justice in American Land Use [Hardback]

Edited by (University of Louisville Center for Land Use and Environmental Responsibility), Edited by (University of Louisville Brandeis School of Law), Edited by (Howard University, Washington DC), Edited by (University of Louisville Institute for Social Justice Research)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 350 pages, Worked examples or Exercises
  • Izdošanas datums: 30-Sep-2025
  • Izdevniecība: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1108477801
  • ISBN-13: 9781108477802
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Racial Justice in American Land Use
  • Formāts: Hardback, 350 pages, Worked examples or Exercises
  • Izdošanas datums: 30-Sep-2025
  • Izdevniecība: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1108477801
  • ISBN-13: 9781108477802
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
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.

Papildus informācija

Advocates for systemic change in American land use to address injustice that persists a century after racial zoning was invalidated.
1. The intransigence of racial injustice in American land use 100+ years
after Buchanan v. Warley Craig Anthony (Tony) Arnold, Cedric Merlin Powell
and Catherine Fosl;
2. The paradox of Buchanan v Warley: the early
twentieth-century black freedom movement and the battle against residential
apartheid Catherine Fosl;
3. Structural inequality and the evolving movements
for land use justice: from housing injustice to environmental injustice to
resilience injustice Craig Anthony (Tony) Arnold, Elizabeth Roseman, Payton
Klatt, Leanna Banda Cruz, Ra'Desha Williams and Andrew Schuhmann;
4.
Assemblages of inequalities and resilience ideologies in urban planning
Emmanuel Frimpong Boamah and Craig Anthony (Tony) Arnold;
5. Race displaced:
Buchanan v. Warley and the neutral rhetoric of due process Cedric Merlin
Powell;
6. There's something happening here: affordable housing as a
nonstarter in the US supreme court Michael Allan Wolf;
7. What would Louis
do? the 'brandeis brief' on land use and its present impact on racial
segregation Laura Rothstein;
8. Why segregation matters: the inequality of
opportunity Michael C. Lens;
9. Zoning's racial innocence and the imperatives
of segregation Audrey G. McFarlane;
10. Understanding evictions as racialized
land use practices in Louisville, Kentucky Kelly L. Kinahan and Lauren C.
Heberle;
11. Hope and transformation: the next 100 years of racial justice in
American land use Craig Anthony (Tony) Arnold, Cedric Merlin Powell, Laura
Rothstein and Catherine Fosl; Index.
Craig Anthony (Tony) Arnold is an internationally renowned transdisciplinary scholar, receiving numerous honors for his pioneering ideas and research in land use, environmental justice, equitable planning, and resilience justice, as well as grants from EPA, USGS, HUD, and NOAA. He is an elected member of Sigma Xi Scientific Research Honor Society. He has also served as a planning commission chairman and city attorney. Cedric Merlin Powell is a prominent Constitutional Law scholar and structural inequality theorist on neutrality and post-racial constitutionalism. He is the author of two other books from Cambridge University Press: Post-Racial Constitutionalism and the Roberts Court: Rhetorical Neutrality and the Perpetuation of Inequality (2022); Post-Racial Federalism: Race, Liberty, and the Democratization of Oppression (forthcoming). He is also an elected member of the American Law Institute. Catherine Fosl is an interdisciplinary scholar of twentieth-century US social justice movements, especially the history of race, gender, and grassroots-level activism in the US South. She has received numerous awards and fellowships for her research and is the author of Subversive Southerner: Anne Braden and the Struggle for Racial Justice in the Cold War South (2006), the definitive biography of civil-rights activist Anne Braden. Laura Rothstein is a renowned leader in US legal education and elected member of the American Law Institute. By using her scholarship to 'advocate through education,' she has worked to promote diversity and raise awareness on issues of disability, gender, and race, as well as to develop policy solutions.