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Before Gentrification

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Draws a direct line between redlining, incarceration, and gentrification in an American city.   This book shows how a century of redlining, disinvestment, and the War on Drugs wreaked devastation o...
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  • 05 September 2023
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Draws a direct line between redlining, incarceration, and gentrification in an American city.
 
This book shows how a century of redlining, disinvestment, and the War on Drugs wreaked devastation on Black people and paved the way for gentrification in Washington, DC. In Before Gentrification, Tanya Maria Golash-Boza tracks the cycles of state abandonment and punishment that have shaped the city, revealing how policies and policing work to displace and decimate the Black middle class.

Through the stories of those who have lost their homes and livelihoods, Golash-Boza explores how DC came to be the nation's "murder capital" and incarceration capital, and why it is now a haven for wealthy White people. This troubling history makes clear that the choice to use prisons and policing to solve problems faced by Black communities in the twentieth century—instead of investing in schools, community centers, social services, health care, and violence prevention—is what made gentrification possible in the twenty-first. Before Gentrification unveils a pattern of anti-Blackness and racial capitalism in DC that has implications for all US cities.
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Price: $27.95
Pages: 312
Publisher: University of California Press
Imprint: University of California Press
Publication Date: 05 September 2023
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780520391178
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

"Tanya Maria Golash–Boza’s fascinating new book, Before Gentrification: The Creation of DC’s Racial Wealth Gap, offers an unflinching critique of the urban disinvestment policies that have destroyed both lives and communities in the nation’s capital."
Tanya Maria Golash-Boza is the Executive Director of the University of California Washington Center and a Professor of Sociology at the University of California, Merced. She is the author of five books that engage with issues such as racism, immigration policy, human rights, and race in Latin America.
Contents

List of Illustrations and Tables 

Acknowledgments

Introduction 

PART ONE: DISINVESTMENT 
1. Dispossession and Displacement 
2. The Violence of Disinvestment 

PART TWO: CARCERAL INVESTMENT 
3. Cracking Down: The War on Drugs and Downward Mobility 
4. Bringing in the Feds: Targeting Black Middle-Class Neighborhoods 

PART THREE: REINVESTMENT 
5. Chocolate City No More: Gentrification through White Reclamation 
6. Racialized Reinvestment: HOPE VI, New Communities, and the End of Public Housing 

Conclusion: Locked Up and Locked Out 

Appendix A: Interviewees 
Appendix B: Oral Histories 
Notes 
References 
Index