Just Shelter - Ronald R. Sundstrom

Just Shelter

Gentrification, Integration, Race, and Reconstruction
Buch | Hardcover
272 Seiten
2024
Oxford University Press Inc (Verlag)
978-0-19-094814-6 (ISBN)
32,40 inkl. MwSt
The United States of America is experiencing a housing crisis, which, by some estimates, started in the early 2000s and was made worse by the financial crisis of the 2007-2008 recession. Hundreds of thousands of Americans lack decent and affordable housing or everyday shelter. Instead, they must live in tent encampments stowed in the niches of neighborhoods and under the freeway overpasses of many major U.S. cities, often in unsafe conditions. Signs of this crisis are all around: in the spikes of evictions, in nationwide problems with over- and under-development, and in the growing concerns about the sustainability of this nation's towns and cities in the face of global climate change.

This crisis didn't arise from the specific circumstances of the housing market or shortfalls in the construction of new homes or increased labor and material costs. The current housing crisis is the result of state-sponsored discrimination in housing and land-use policy and the enforcement of racial and class-based discrimination by neighborhoods and cities. All of these phenomena have had long-lasting effects on access to housing and educational and economic opportunity.

Just Shelter is a work of political philosophy that examines the core injustices of the contemporary U.S. housing crisis and its relation to enduring racial injustices. It examines the harms of segregation, and asks: are desegregation or integration morally required of our communities and societies? Are the concerns that are expressed about gentrification related to the moral and political concerns that we have with segregation? Is there a moral imperative, and would it be politically legitimate, for our communities and society to mitigate or stop gentrification? Just Shelter investigates gentrification, segregation, desegregation, integration, and homelessness. To achieve justice in social-spatial arrangements, federal, state, and local governments must prioritize the crafting and enforcement of housing policy that corrects the injustices of the past. If we do not address the history of racism in housing policy, we will never solve today's housing crisis.

Ronald R. Sundstrom is Professor of Philosophy at the University of San Francisco. He is also a member of USF's African American Studies program, teaches for the university's Honors College, and is the Humanities Advisor for the SF Urban Film Festival. His research has focused on the philosophy of race, mixed-race identity and politics, political and social philosophy, justice and ethics in urban policy, and African American and Asian American philosophy. He published several essays and a book in these areas, including The Browning of America and the Evasion of Social Justice.

Introduction
Acknowledgements

Chapter 1: Justice and Social Spatial Arrangements
1.1 Introduction
1.2 Spatial Justice
1.3 Equality and Social Spatial Arrangements
1.4 Distributive Justice

Chapter 2: Open Cities and Reconstructive Justice
2.1 Introduction
2.2 Reaching for Transformation
2.3 Open Communities and Substantive Opportunity
2.4 Rectifying Enduring Injustice

Chapter 3: The Trouble with Gentrification
3.1 Bad Techies
3.2 The Concept of Gentrification
3.3 Two or Three Cheers for Gentrification
3.4 Here's the Thing about Displacement
3.5 Harms and Inequality

Chapter 4: The Harms of Gentrification
4.1 The Harms
4.2 Distributive Justice
4.3 Cultural Loss
4.4 Democratic Inequality
4.5 Pragmatic Rectification

Chapter 5: Segregation and the Trouble with Integration
5.1 Know Your Place
5.2 The Concept of Social-Spatial Segregation
5.3 The Benefits of Segregation
5.4 The Harms of Segregation
5.5 Integration as Evenness and Mobility
5.6 Integration is not a Proxy for Justice

Chapter 6: Reconstructing Integration
6.1 What Remains of Integration
6.2 Integration as Reconstruction
6.3 Outcomes, not Conversion

Chapter 7: Conclusion
7. Discomfiting Justice

Bibliography

Erscheinungsdatum
Verlagsort New York
Sprache englisch
Maße 203 x 145 mm
Gewicht 408 g
Themenwelt Geisteswissenschaften Philosophie
Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie
ISBN-10 0-19-094814-0 / 0190948140
ISBN-13 978-0-19-094814-6 / 9780190948146
Zustand Neuware
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Buch | Hardcover (2023)
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