The Inhumanity of Urban Renewal

$ 12.00

Author: Bryton and Ella Barron
Publisher: Crestwood Books 
Year: 1965 Print: 1 Cover Price: $1.00
Condition: Book Grades. Very Good.  Light wear. 
Genre: Non Fiction/Sociology/Politics
Pages: 88
60126079E

The book acts as a damning expose of the human and economic toll of the Housing Act of 1949 and subsequent urban renewal initiatives. Rather than viewing urban renewal as a benevolent tool for modernization, the text documents it as a destructive force that weaponized eminent domain. 
The core themes and arguments documented in the text include:
  • Mass Displacement: It highlights how federal funding allowed local authorities to use the "bulldozer method" to completely flatten vibrant, established ethnic and minority neighborhoods under the guise of eradicating "blight". 
  • The Destruction of Minorities and the Poor: The documentation outlines how these programs disproportionately uprooted low-income, Black, and immigrant families. It famously aligns with the period's activist sentiment that "urban renewal meant negro removal". 
  • Economic Injustice: The text details the financial ruin of small, neighborhood-based businesses that were forced out to clear massive plots of land. This land was then handed over to wealthy private developers for highly profitable commercial spaces or luxury housing. 
  • Erasure of Community Ties: Beyond physical structures, it focuses on the psychological and social trauma of breaking up tight-knit communities, leaving displaced citizens with little to no financial assistance to relocate safely.

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