Suburbs under Siege
Subject
: Discrimination in housing—Law and legislation—
United States, Land use—Law and
legislation—United States, Courts—United States, Race relations, social justice
Publisher
: Princeton University Press
Summary :THIS BOOK springs from a deeply felt desire to understand and ameliorate
the racial and ethnic divisions that stubbornly continue to polarize our
public life. I seek, in particular, to comprehend—and to help that mythic
person, the general reader, comprehend—our legal system's response to
these divisions as they affect the modern American metropolis. My focus
is on the intersection of two realities of post-modern society: segregation
by race in metropolitan settlements, and the role the courts play in responding
to the ensuing inequalities.
No domestic issue is more troubling to American society today than
the economic and social division between the races. While a cleavage
along class and racial lines runs through many and diverse aspects of
American life, nowhere is the partition more glaring or inescapable than
in the gulf between the poverty and despair of central cities and the
wealth and opportunity of suburbs. The exodus of jobs and mostly white
middle- and upper-income people from our urban centers to suburban
enclaves has split this country into two nations: one reserved for the
haves, the other entrapping the have-nots.
What is to be done? As a student of urbanism at a law school, heir to
the Holmesian precept that the life of the law is, fundamentally, experience,
I have sought to translate general concepts into concrete actions. In public service at national and state levels, I have joined with many others
in efforts to bridge the gap between rhetoric and reality so as to emerge
from the shadow that falls between the democratic ideal and the sober
reality.
Copies :
No. |
Barcode |
Location |
No. Shelf |
Availability |
1 |
00131314 |
Perpustakaan Pusat |
|
TIDAK DIPINJAMKAN |