2017 TheColorofLawAForgottenHistoryo

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  • (Rothstein, 2017) ⇒ Richard Rothstein. (2017). “The Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How Our Government Segregated America.” Liveright Publishing Corporation.

Subject Headings: Historical Exposé, Jim Crow, Redlining, U.S. Racial Segregation, State-Sanctioned Violence, White Flight.

Notes

  • A racial zoning exposé that reveals how early 20th-century policies explicitly designed neighborhoods to segregate by race, using local laws to enforce residential boundaries which the U.S. Supreme Court eventually challenged but could not entirely dismantle due to subtler methods that followed【16†source】【19†source】.
  • The exposé on white flight illustrates the migration patterns of white residents moving away from urban centers to suburbs in reaction to African American migration, highlighting how this movement contributed to persistent residential segregation even without formal legal barriers【17†source】.
  • The exposé on IRS support and compliant regulators demonstrates how tax policies and local governmental compliance played significant roles in maintaining segregated communities by favoring certain racial groups through financial incentives【16†source】.
  • The exposé on local tactics outlines the various methods cities used to perpetuate segregation, such as economic or health-based zoning that effectively kept minority groups in less desirable areas of cities, illustrating the depth of systemic discrimination at the municipal level【16†source】【19†source】.
  • The exposé on state-sanctioned violence underscores the role of law enforcement and local authorities in upholding segregation laws and norms through the use of violence or the threat thereof, often directed at minorities attempting to cross racial boundaries【19†source】.
  • The exposé on suppressed incomes discusses how segregated neighborhoods contributed to economic disparities, limiting access to opportunities and resources for minority communities and reinforcing the socioeconomic bases of residential segregation【16†source】.

Cited By

References

2024

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Quotes

Table of Contents

   Preface
   If San Francisco, then Everywhere?
   Public Housing, Black Ghettos
   Racial Zoning
   "Own Your Own Home"
   Private Agreements, Government Enforcement
   White Flight
   IRS Support and Compliant Regulators
   Local Tactics
   State-Sanctioned Violence
   Suppressed Incomes
   Looking Forward, Looking Back
   Considering Fixes
   Epilogue
   Appendix: Frequently Asked Questions
   Author's Note and Acknowledgments
   Notes
   Bibliography
   Photograph Credits
   Index

References

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 AuthorvolumeDate ValuetitletypejournaltitleUrldoinoteyear
2017 TheColorofLawAForgottenHistoryoRichard RothsteinThe Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How Our Government Segregated America2017