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Building Downtown Los Angeles

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From the 1970s on, Los Angeles was transformed into a center for entertainment, consumption, and commerce for the affluent. Mirroring the urban development trend across the nation, new construction...
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  • 26 July 2022
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From the 1970s on, Los Angeles was transformed into a center for entertainment, consumption, and commerce for the affluent. Mirroring the urban development trend across the nation, new construction led to the displacement of low-income and working-class racial minorities, as city officials targeted these neighborhoods for demolition in order to spur economic growth and bring in affluent residents. Responding to the displacement, there emerged a coalition of unions, community organizers, and faith-based groups advocating for policy change. In Building Downtown Los Angeles Leland Saito traces these two parallel trends through specific construction projects and the backlash they provoked. He uses these events to theorize the past and present processes of racial formation and the racialization of place, drawing new insights on the relationships between race, place, and policy. Saito brings to bear the importance of historical events on contemporary processes of gentrification and integrates the fluidity of racial categories into his analysis. He explores these forces in action, as buyers and entrepreneurs meet in the real estate marketplace, carrying with them a fraught history of exclusion and vast disparities in wealth among racial groups.

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Price: $28.00
Pages: 266
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Imprint: Stanford University Press
Publication Date: 26 July 2022
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781503632523
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

"Another richly detailed book on capitalistic space control and white racism by Leland Saito! Although big capital and city officials remade LA's Broadway area, California's progressive growth-with-equity groups democratized this once capitalist-dominated city development process. Accenting historical context and changing meanings of white racial framing of cities, Saito crafts a very innovative racial-spatial formation theory." —Joe Feagin, Texas A&M University
Leland T. Saito is Professor of Sociology and American Studies & Ethnicity at University of Southern California. He is the author of the award-winning book, The Politics of Exclusion (Stanford, 2009).
Introduction: Racial-Spatial Formation
1. The Los Angeles Convention Center: 1950s-1990s
2. The Staples Center and L.A. Live: 1990s-2010s
3. Growth Interests and the Growth with Equity Coalition: 1990s
4. Negotiating the L.A. Live Community Benefits Agreement: 1990s-2000s
5. Evaluating the L.A. Live Community Benefits Agreement: 2000s
6. The NFL Stadium Proposal and Neighborhood Change: 1990-2015
Conclusion: Implications for Social Justice