Public housing and gender: Contextualizing the "We Call These Projects Home" report

被引:6
|
作者
Reid, Megan [1 ]
机构
[1] Natl Dev & Res Inst Inc, Inst Special Populat Res, New York, NY 10010 USA
关键词
Public housing; Community; Gender; Race; Poverty; Deconcentration; UNITED-STATES; SEXUAL-HARASSMENT; DISCRIMINATION; OPPORTUNITY; PROGRAMS; RACE; SEGREGATION; MOBILITY; LESSONS; HISTORY;
D O I
10.1016/j.cities.2012.10.006
中图分类号
TU98 [区域规划、城乡规划];
学科分类号
0814 ; 082803 ; 0833 ;
摘要
The "We Call These Projects Home" (WCTPH) report draws attention to the ways in which US public housing policy has disregarded the input and preferences of public housing residents, a population largely composed of women of color. In this article, I examine the findings from the WCTPH report in the context of past and recent research on poverty, housing, race, and gender. I explain how breaking up communities and social networks in the shift from housing projects to housing vouchers destroys social support networks, which are essential to the survival of poor women and single-mother headed families. I discuss challenges women may face in the shift to housing vouchers in light of recent research on continued rental discrimination and sexual harassment in the private housing market. Overall, I emphasize how the findings from the WCTPH report have important implications for women of color, and argue that a gender analysis of public housing is central to understanding and remedying the multitude of challenge public housing policy presents. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:335 / 341
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Anyone Can Do YouTube, but Not Everyone Can Do Public Access: Urban Politics, Production Tools, and a Communications Infrastructure to Call Home
    Dewey, Matthew
    TELEVISION & NEW MEDIA, 2021, 22 (07) : 779 - 798
  • [42] Remaking Singapore's heartland: sustaining public housing through home and neighbourhood upgrade programmes
    Glass, Michael R.
    Salvador, Anna E.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HOUSING POLICY, 2018, 18 (03) : 479 - 490
  • [43] The influence of the residential environment on well-being and personal projects: Perspectives of young people living in public housing
    Latreille, Jeremie
    Houle, Janie
    Coulombe, Simon
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2024, 98
  • [44] Reducing Cost Overrun in Public Housing Projects: A Simplified Reference Class Forecast for Small Island Developing States
    Chadee, Aaron
    Martin, Hector
    Gallage, Sihara
    Rathnayake, Upaka
    BUILDINGS, 2023, 13 (04)
  • [45] In-Home Air Filtration for Improving Cardiovascular Health: Lessons from a CBPR Study in Public Housing
    Brugge, Doug
    Reisner, Ellin
    Padro-Martinez, Luz T.
    Zamore, Wig
    Owusu, Emmanuel
    Durant, John L.
    PROGRESS IN COMMUNITY HEALTH PARTNERSHIPS-RESEARCH EDUCATION AND ACTION, 2013, 7 (01) : 49 - 56
  • [46] At home, in public, and in between: gender differences in public, private and transportation pro-environmental behaviors in the US Intermountain West
    Briscoe, Michael D.
    Givens, Jennifer E.
    Hazboun, Shawn
    Krannich, Richard S.
    ENVIRONMENTAL SOCIOLOGY, 2019, 5 (04): : 374 - 392
  • [47] "We the Tenants": Resident Organizing in New York City's Public Housing, 1964-1978
    Juravich, Nick
    JOURNAL OF URBAN HISTORY, 2017, 43 (03) : 400 - 420
  • [48] Mammography screening and breast self-examination among minority women in public housing projects:: The impact of physician recommendation
    Bazargan, M
    Bazargan, SH
    Calderón, JL
    Husaini, BA
    Baker, RS
    CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 2003, 49 (08) : 1213 - 1218
  • [49] To go big, we have to go home: building foundations for the future of community-engaged and public-facing research in linguistics
    Charity Hudley, Anne
    Mallinson, Christine
    Clemons, Aris
    LINGUISTICS VANGUARD, 2024, 10 : 171 - 180
  • [50] "Broken Home": (De)constructing the Moral Standards of Mobility for Atlanta's Early Black Public Housing Families
    Rodriguez, Akira Drake
    Dantzler, Prentiss A.
    CITY & COMMUNITY, 2024, 23 (04) : 296 - 319