Front cover image for Segregation by design local politics and inequality in American cities

Segregation by design local politics and inequality in American cities

Jessica Trounstine (Author)
The first account of how local governments generate segregation, this book documents changing patterns of segregation, the political mechanisms that produce them, and the consequences. It will be read by scholars, students, and general readers interested in urban politics, inequality, segregation, race, public policy, history, and urban economics.
Print Book, English, 2019
Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2019
262 p.
9781108454988, 9781108429955, 1108454984, 1108429955
1113519575
1. Introduction; 2. A theory of segregation by design; 3. Protecting investments: segregation and the development of the metropolis; 4. Engineering enclaves: how local governments produce segregation; 5. Living on the wrong side of the tracks: inequality in public goods provision, 1900–1940; 6. Cracks in the foundation: losing control over protected neighborhoods; 7. Segregation's negative consequences; 8. Locking in segregation through suburban control; 9. The polarized nation that segregation built; 10. Concluding thoughts and new designs; References; Index.