This book provides insights in how the lack of coherent social policy leads to the displacement of vulnerable low-income
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Since its emergence in the mid-nineteenth century as the nation's "metropolis," New York has faced the mo
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A richly illustrated history of below-market housing in New York, from the 1920s to today How has America's most e
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For many years Chicago’s looming large-scale housing projects defined the city, and their demolition and redevelopment—v
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One of the nation’s foremost urban historians traces the history of cooperative housing in New York City from the 1920s
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A legendary figure in the realms of public policy and academia, John Gilderbloom is one of the foremost urban-planning r
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Housing the North American City is the first comprehensive study of the way North Americans have built their cities. Foc
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From 1963 to 1965 roughly 6,000 families moved into Rochdale Village, at the time the world's largest housing coope
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This book is a volume in the Penn Press Anniversary Collection. To mark its 125th anniversary in 2015, the University of
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In July 1964, after a white police officer shot and killed a Black teenage boy, unrest broke out in Harlem and then Bedf
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Public Housing That Worked offers a comprehensive history of America's largest and most successful housing authorit
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