Description
This second edition of The Affordable Housing Reader provides context for current discussions surrounding housing policy, emphasizing the values and assumptions underlying debates over strategies for ameliorating housing problems experienced by low-income residents and communities of color.
The authors highlighted in this updated volume address themes central to housing as an area of social policy and to understanding its particular meaning in the United States. These include the long history of racial exclusion and the role that public policy has played in racializing access to decent housing and well-serviced neighborhoods; the tension between the economic and social goals of housing policy; and the role that housing plays in various aspects of the lives of low- and moderate-income residents. Scholarship and the COVID-19 pandemic are raising awareness of the link between access to adequate housing and other rights and opportunities. This timely reader focuses attention on the results of past efforts and on the urgency of reframing the conversation.
It is both an exciting time to teach students about the evolution of United States' housing policy and a challenging time to discuss what policymakers or practitioners can do to effect positive change. This reader is aimed at students, professors, researchers, and professionals of housing policy, public policy, and city planning.
Author: Elizabeth Mueller
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 07/14/2022
Pages: 538
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 2.04lbs
Size: 9.69h x 6.85w x 1.16d
ISBN13: 9780367280475
ISBN10: 0367280477
BISAC Categories:
- Architecture | Landscape
- Social Science | Human Geography
- Social Science | Sociology | Rural
About the Author
Elizabeth J. Mueller is an associate professor of Community and Regional Planning and Social Work at the University of Texas at Austin.
J. Rosie Tighe is an associate professor in the Department of Urban Studies in the Levin College of Urban Affairs at Cleveland State University.
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