In Segregation by Law: The Government’s Role in Creating Racial and Economic Inequality, author Shadab uncovers the uncomfortable reality that America’s racial and economic inequalities were not accidents of history, but the result of deliberate government decisions. Through policies like redlining, zoning laws, and urban renewal, the systemic barriers to equality were built—cementing racial segregation and economic disparity for generations.
This book delves deep into how government-enforced segregation shaped communities across the country. From the notorious Jim Crow laws in the South to less overt yet equally damaging practices in the North, Segregation by Law exposes the calculated steps taken to create and sustain racial hierarchies. It connects the dots between housing discrimination, public housing projects, and the enduring racial wealth gap, showing how government policies have divided neighborhoods, limited economic mobility, and perpetuated institutionalized racism.
For a century, American neighborhoods were sorted by policies that claimed to protect “stability” but in practice fenced people apart—through mortgage insurance rules, restrictive deeds, exclusionary zoning, contract selling, urban renewal highways, and appraisal habits that still echo today.
This book traces how that machinery worked—step by step—and what it did to home values, schools, and family wealth. Each chapter pairs human stories with clear, document-based explanations and then moves to what fixes actually work: covenant discharge and title hygiene, zoning reforms that expand supply, corridor reconnections that heal divided districts, mobility programs with guardrails, and modern appraisal and assessment corrections.
Inside you’ll find:
• A plain-language map of the system—from FHA/VA underwriting to bank overlays, from “neutral” screens to contract sales.
• City vignettes that show how rules on paper turned into practices on the ground.
• Visuals and data summaries that make the evidence legible without academic jargon.
• A remedies playbook with concrete steps, timelines, and risks to watch.
Whether you’re a student, journalist, planner, advocate, investor, or neighbor who wants to understand why opportunity clusters on one side of a line and not the other, this is a usable history—rooted in records, focused on repairs, and written to be acted on.
What this book argues: segregation wasn’t an accident; it was administered. Because it was administered, it can be un-administered—carefully, measurably, and at scale. The path to fairer neighborhoods isn’t mysticism; it’s policy, paperwork, and persistence.
Segregation by Law isn’t just a history book—it’s a call to action. By tracing the origins of these injustices, Shadab invites readers to reflect on the present and to consider what must be done to dismantle the legacy of inequality and move toward a more just and equitable future.
Die Inhaltsangabe kann sich auf eine andere Ausgabe dieses Titels beziehen.
Anbieter: Ria Christie Collections, Uxbridge, Vereinigtes Königreich
Zustand: New. In. Artikel-Nr. ria9798341167247_new
Anzahl: Mehr als 20 verfügbar