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Viewing 61–90 of 119 results.
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Lightning Struck
How an Atlanta neighborhood died on the altar of Super Bowl dreams.
by
Max Blau
via
The Bitter Southerner
on
January 22, 2019
Roads to Nowhere: How Infrastructure Built on American Inequality
From highways carved through thriving ‘ghettoes’ to walls segregating areas by race, city development has a divisive history.
by
Johnny Miller
via
The Guardian
on
February 21, 2018
The Deeper Problem Behind the Sale of a Posh San Francisco Street
The news that a posh San Francisco street was sold for delinquent taxes exposes the deeper issue with America’s local revenue system.
by
Brent Cebul
via
CityLab
on
August 18, 2017
The Racist History of Portland, the Whitest City in America
It’s known as a modern-day hub of progressivism, but its past is one of exclusion.
by
Alana Semuels
via
The Atlantic
on
July 22, 2016
Evaluating the Success of the Great Society
Lyndon B. Johnson's visionary set of legislation turns 50 years old.
via
Washington Post
on
May 17, 2014
Reimagining Recreation
How the New Left, urban renewal, safety concerns, and child psychology affected the design of New York playgrounds.
by
James Trainor
via
Cabinet
on
April 18, 2012
The Question Progressives Refuse to Answer
As Democrats became the party of proceduralism, they sidestepped a crucial debate.
by
Marc J. Dunkelman
via
The Atlantic
on
April 2, 2025
The Inadequacy of the Abundance Agenda
Three new books propose market solutions to problems that require government intervention. We’ve been here before. It didn’t end well.
by
Timothy Noah
via
The New Republic
on
March 27, 2025
The Shrouded, Sinister History Of The Bulldozer
From India to the Amazon to Israel, bulldozers have left a path of destruction that offers a cautionary tale for how technology can be misused.
by
Joe Zadeh
via
Noema
on
February 20, 2025
How Progressives Froze the American Dream
The U.S. was once the world’s most geographically mobile society. Now we’re stuck in place—and that’s a very big problem.
by
Yoni Appelbaum
via
The Atlantic
on
February 10, 2025
From Street Gang to Revolutionaries
José ‘Cha Cha’ Jiménez and the Young Lords laid the groundwork for radical racial justice movements.
by
Felipe Hinojosa
via
Religion Dispatches
on
February 4, 2025
The True Story of Tulsa’s Forgotten Antihero, Sadie James
And a walk downtown in search of her saloon, the Bucket of Blood.
by
Russell Cobb
via
The Pickup
on
January 23, 2025
The World of Tomorrow
When the future arrived, it felt…ordinary. What happened to the glamour of tomorrow?
by
Virginia Postrel
via
Works In Progress
on
December 5, 2024
How “The Great Gatsby” Changed the Landscape of New York City
On Robert Moses, F. Scott Fitzgerald, and the culture of environmental waste.
by
John Marsh
via
Monthly Review
on
November 13, 2024
The Anacostia and Residential Displacement in Postwar Southeast DC
The long-polluted Anacostia bisects the District’s Potomac waterfront, segregating the majority-Black Southeast from the rest of the capital city.
by
S. D. Hodell
via
The Metropole
on
April 17, 2024
Before the Wrecking Ball Swung
The Historic American Building Survey's mission to photograph important architecture before its demolition.
by
Martin Filler
via
New York Review of Books
on
November 9, 2023
How the New York of Robert Moses Shaped my Father’s Health
My dad grew up in Robert Moses’s New York City. His story is a testament to how urban planning shapes countless lives.
by
Katie Mulkowsky
via
Aeon
on
November 3, 2023
Philadelphia's Fight Against Gun Violence, Poverty, and Crime
For decades, Philadelphia has struggled with poverty and gun violence. Social uplift organizations of the past have demonstrated that racial equity is the key.
by
Menika Dirkson
via
Black Perspectives
on
August 31, 2023
partner
We Mythologize Highways, But They’ve Damaged Communities of Color
Planners of the Interstate Highway System ignored warnings that they were damaging poor Black and Latino neighborhoods.
by
Ryan Reft
via
Made By History
on
January 19, 2023
Building Blocks
An exhibition exploring the connections between the environment and social justice, using maps and visual materials.
by
Laura Lee Schmidt
via
Norman B. Leventhal Map & Education Center
on
January 13, 2023
Life In The ’Burgh'
A Steel City bibliography of Pittsburgh.
by
Drew Simpson
,
Dan Holland
via
The Metropole
on
January 11, 2023
The Tyranny Of The Map: Rethinking Redlining
In trying to understand one of the key aspects of structural racism, have we constructed a new moralistic story that obscures more than it illuminates?
by
Robert Gioielli
via
The Metropole
on
November 3, 2022
original
Redlining is Only Part of the Story
An annotated collection of resources from the Bunk archive that help explain the long history of housing discrimination.
by
Julian Maxwell Hayter
on
October 5, 2022
How the Block Party Became an Urban Phenomenon
“That spirit of community, which we all talk about as the roots of hip-hop, really originates in that block party concept.”
by
Briana A. Thomas
via
Smithsonian
on
August 10, 2022
Who Profits?
How nonprofits went from essential service providers to vehicles for programs shaped and approved by capital.
by
Justin H. Vassallo
via
The Baffler
on
July 25, 2022
Black Mayors, Black Politics, and the Gary Convention
The National Black Political Convention of 1972 saw many national giants on the Black political scene.
by
Brandon Stokes
via
Black Perspectives
on
March 22, 2022
We Need “CRT” to Understand the Midwest, Too
You can't tell the story of Midwestern cities like Toledo without being honest about their white supremacy problems.
by
Bradley J. Sommer
via
The Activist History Review
on
January 13, 2022
How a Harlem Skyrise Got Hijacked—and Forgotten
The fate of June Jordan’s visionary reimagining of Harlem shows that when it comes to Utopias, the key question is always: “Whose?”
by
Sharifa Rhodes-Pitts
via
The Nation
on
July 10, 2021
Notes on Hot Chicken, Race, and Culinary Crossover
How does Black food go viral among white folks?
by
Cynthia R. Greenlee
via
The Counter
on
May 11, 2021
partner
Solving Homelessness Requires Getting the Problem Right
Decades of stigmatizing and trying to police the homeless have perpetuated the problem.
by
Ella Howard
via
Made By History
on
May 10, 2021
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