Five insights from our policy responses to protests in US cities...

Similar documents
REGENERATION AND INEQUALITY IN AMERICA S LEGACY CITIES

We could write hundreds of pages on the history of how we found ourselves in the crisis that we see today. In this section, we highlight some key

Faithful and Strategic Engagement in Metropolitan Richmond Facilitator s Workbook

An Equity Profile of the Southeast Florida Region. Summary. Foreword

Race, Ethnicity, and Economic Outcomes in New Mexico

Race to Equity. A Project to Reduce Racial Disparities in Dane County

Racial Inequities in the Washington, DC, Region

Ending Concentrated Poverty: New Directions After Hurricane Katrina The Enterprise Foundation October 12, 2005

PUBLIC POLICY PLATFORM

The Effect of the Mount Laurel Decision on Segregation by Race, Income and Poverty Status. Damiano Sasso College of New Jersey April 20, 2004

Structural Change: Confronting Race and Class

Confronting Suburban Poverty in the Greater New York Area. Alan Berube, with the Brooking s Institute, presents on Confronting Suburban Poverty:

Building Stronger Communities for Better Health: The Geography of Health Equity

Unlocking Opportunities in the Poorest Communities: A Policy Brief

Safety and Justice. How Should Communities Reduce Violence?

December 10, study, Census show NWI is most segregated metro area in the country

Towards a Policy Actionable Analysis of Geographic and Racial Health Disparities

Economic Segregation in the Housing Market: Examining the Effects of the Mount Laurel Decision in New Jersey

Sustainable Cities. Judith Maxwell. Canadian Policy Research Networks. Canadian Institute of Planners. Halifax, July 7, 2003

First World Summit for the People of Afro Decent

$15. Bigger paychecks, more good jobs, & thriving communities. Why raising the minimum wage is good for everyone in North Carolina.

Escalating Economic Inequity Statement of Conscience adopted at Unitarian Universalist General Assembly, 2017 Jun

Opportunity Neighborhoods: Building the Foundation for Economic Mobility in America s Metros

A PHILANTHROPIC PARTNERSHIP FOR BLACK COMMUNITIES. Criminal Justice BLACK FACTS

Hearing on Proposals for Reducing Poverty. April 26, Thank you, Chairman McDermott and members of the Subcommittee. I am John Podesta,

VULNERABILITY INEQUALITY. Impacts of Segregation and Exclusionary Practices. Shannon Van Zandt, Ph.D., AICP

LIMITS ON HOUSING AND NEIGHBORHOOD CHOICE: DISCRIMINATION AND SEGREGATION IN U.S. HOUSING MARKETS

Data-Driven Research for Environmental Justice

THE RIGHT INVESTMENT? Corrections Spending in Baltimore City

From Ferguson to Baltimore: The consequences of government-sponsored segregation

The National Commission on Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity in Housing Hearing. September 22, 2008 Boston, MA. Testimony of Erin Kemple

Darren Walker, President, Ford Foundation Opening Plenary Speech Funder Network 15 th Annual Conference Boston, Mass. Monday, March 17, 2014

JICA s Position Paper on SDGs: Goal 10

STRENGTHS, WEAKNESSES, OPPORTUNITIES AND THREATS

Where Do We Belong? Fixing America s Broken Housing System

Racial Inequities in Montgomery County

Structural Inclusion & Public Health

Making Connections in the Metropolitan Age

The Bay Area Housing Crisis: Its Roots and Effects

Gentrification: Deliberate Displacement, or Natural Social Movement?

PUBLISHED BY THE FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF CLEVELAND

Division Street, U.S.A.

Cook County Health Strategic Planning Landscape

A Barometer of the Economic Recovery in Our State

FOR ACTION OUR COMMUNITIES. OUR PRIORITIES. OUR COUNTRY.

PROVIDING CHOICE: HOUSING MOBILITY COUNSELING PROGRAMS

November 1, 2004 VIA FACSIMILE: ( ) Dear Mr. Chandler:

Partnership for Southern Equity GROWING THE FUTURE: The Case for Economic Inclusion in Metro Atlanta

Housing Discrimination Complaint. Metropolitan Interfaith Council on Affordable Housing, et al. v. State of Minnesota, et al.

From military peace to social justice? The Angolan peace process

A Rights-Based Approach to Racial Equity Work. By Emily Farell and Sarah Herder June 24 th, 2015

The Power of. Sri Lankans. For Peace, Justice and Equality

PUERTO RICO S SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC CRISIS: A CASE OF INEQUALITY IN THE U.S.A.

Alternative Spring Break Supplemental Participant Application PROGRAM INFORMATION

Measuring Racial Equity: Challenges, Opportunities, and Applications of Culturally Responsive Assessment

Lessons From from Three HUD Demonstration Initiatives

The Effects of the 1930s HOLC Redlining Maps

Nicole Castillo Ward 1 at-large Contact: Progressive Newton 2017 Municipal Candidates Questionnaire

The geography of exclusion

POWERLESS: How Lax Antitrust and Concentrated Market Power Exacerbate and Reinscribe Racial Inequality

Changing Cities: What s Next for Charlotte?

E/ESCAP/FSD(3)/INF/6. Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific Asia-Pacific Forum on Sustainable Development 2016

SCHOOLS AND PRISONS: FIFTY YEARS AFTER BROWN V. BOARD OF EDUCATION

Ban the Box? An Effort to Stop Discrimination May Actually Increase It

The African American Community in Multnomah County: An Unsettling Profile. A partnership between

The United States History of Segregated Housing Continues to Limit Affordable Housing

CITIZENSHIPvEMPOWERMENTvLEADERSHIP

Promoting equality, including social equity, gender equality and women s empowerment. Statement on behalf of France, Germany and Switzerland

An Equity Assessment of the. St. Louis Region

Combatting the two-speed economy 17 IDEAS FOR LABOR TO FIGHT INEQUALITY IN NSW

Joint Center for Housing Studies Harvard University

COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF NEIGHBORHOOD CONTEXTS: ANNIE E. CASEY FOUNDATION CITIES

The Suburbanization of the Non-Gentry

Foundations of Urban Health. Professor: Dr. Judy Lubin Urban Health Disparities

RiseOut Bootcamp 101. Table of Contents

In order to fulfill our mission to support the development. Ecosystem Grantmaking

Overview SEEKING STABILITY: Evidence on Strategies for Reducing the Risk of Conflict in Northern Jordanian Communities Hosting Syrian Refugees

Public Disclosure Authorized. Public Disclosure Authorized. Public Disclosure Authorized. Public Disclosure Authorized

Poverty in Buffalo-Niagara

Excellencies, Dear friends, Good morning everybody.

Spartanburg Racial Equity Index. A Review of Predictors and Outcomes. Metropolitan Studies Institute at USC Upstate. Kathleen Brady, PhD 8/1/18

On the Table Philly 2017 Impact Report

Fairfax County NAACP Political Advocacy Agenda and Legislative Priorities

ROCHESTER-MONROE ANTI-POVERTY INITIATVE RELEASES PROGRESS REPORT

Module 5 Review Guide

N A T I O N S U N I E S. New

Swiss Position on Gender Equality in the Post-2015 Agenda

A Chronicle of Suburban Pioneers

The Suburbanization of the Non-Gentry

Hartford. Fair Housing Tour A look into the past to help us prepare for the future.

WORKING GROUP OF EXPERTS ON PEOPLE OF AFRICAN DESCENT


WITH THIS ISSUE, the Pennsylvania Magazine of History and

BUILDING OPPORTUNITY PRELIMINARY PRESS RELEASE - SEPTEMBER 2009

THE FORGOTTEN HISTORY OF HOW GOVERNMENT SEGREGATED

The War on Poverty and. its Effects on the Wealth Gap ######### History. Word Count: [Model P.E.E., pp. 5-6] [see p.8 and apply P.E.E.

RECONSTRUCTING DEMOCRACY IN AN ERA OF INEQUALITY

The Persistence of Discrimination in U.S. Housing Markets

The Role of Foundations in Integrating Antipoverty Work into a Broader Systemic Change Agenda

Household Sorting. Economics 312 Martin Farnham

Transcription:

Five insights from our policy responses to protests in US cities... Urban Wire :: Adolescents and Youth RSS The voices of Urban Institute's researchers and staff Five insights from our policy responses to protests in US cities Margery Austin Turner, Zachary J. McDade May 28, 2015 Throughout this week, Urban Institute scholars offer evidence-based ideas for policies that can make a difference for communities in Baltimore and beyond grappling with inequality and injustice. Although this series covers a lot of issues, we by no means address all the challenges that matter. 1 of 6 4/5/16, 10:56 AM

recent anger and protest in Baltimore and other cities. Each post focused on a specific challenge facing communities of color in urban America today from abusive police practices to joblessness to failing schools to poor health and more. For people in Baltimore and other places looking for real change, we hope this collection provides actionable ideas for policies that can make a difference. Here we offer our take on five cross-cutting insights from those posts. 1. Public policies built these problems over decades For decades, public policies and discriminatory market practices confined African Americans to segregated neighborhoods and starved these neighborhoods of services and investments. The resulting neighborhood distress exacerbated other disparate outcomes: discrimination in labor markets, large and growing wealth inequalities, disproportionately harsh enforcement of drug and sentencing laws. The result is a vicious cycle of isolation and disadvantage in which people of color living in poor neighborhoods lack access to the resources and opportunities they need to thrive. 2. There is no silver bullet solution to generations of concentrated disadvantage Reversing this vicious cycle requires policy changes across multiple domains. An apt metaphor is to think of a web: while many people are working on solutions to individual problems, each of those strands must both be strengthened and woven together into a web that actively supports people and helps them thrive. 3. Solutions have to extend beyond neighborhoods of poverty and distress to tackle larger system failures A few examples: 2 of 6 4/5/16, 10:56 AM

violence, build systems of police accountability, and work to build trust with the communities they serve. City and suburban jurisdictions should implement inclusionary zoning to allow for the development of affordable housing options in all neighborhoods. Jurisdictions facing gentrification pressures should deploy tools like shared equity homeownership to allow low-income residents to take advantage of economic development and growing house prices in their neighborhoods. States and school districts should mitigate the harmful effects of race and poverty concentration in public schools by more equitably allocating public school resources to the students who most need them. Federal policy can encourage mortgage lenders to expand their definitions of good credit and ensure that people whose credit has been damaged by a legacy of disadvantage can take advantage of homeownership to build wealth and strong communities. 4. We see reasons for optimism; the tools and knowledge exist to chart a new path Today, unlike in the 1980s and 90s, cities like Baltimore and others are well placed to leverage millennials renting and home-buying desires into neighborhood revitalization. And new Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing rules (soon to be issued by HUD) offer the potential to preserve affordable options for low-income residents, while also opening up access to opportunity-rich neighborhoods regionwide. Other current policies are already showing success. Although 21 states did not expand Medicaid under Obamacare, millions of people have recently gained health insurance, which contributes importantly to good health. And innovative strategies like HOST can bring the partnerships and resources necessary to weave that web of support for the most vulnerable families in 3 of 6 4/5/16, 10:56 AM

5. Effective strategies listen to the people whose lives are most affected Generations of segregation and concentrated disadvantage have stripped communities of color of political voice and power. It s time now to elevate those communities voices as an integral part of designing new policy. Protesters in Baltimore and other cities were calling, most immediately, for police to stop killing their family members, friends, and neighbors. And they have every reason to demand immediate action. Many of the policies we ve explored in this collection would pay off right away in quality-of-life improvements. But overcoming the legacies of the past and achieving real equity of opportunity will require sustained effort over decades. Illustration by Adrienne Hapanowicz As an organization, the Urban Institute does not take positions on issues. Scholars are independent and empowered to share their evidence-based views and recommendations shaped by research. TAGS 4 of 6 4/5/16, 10:56 AM

ADOLESCENTS AND YOUTH CRIME AND JUSTICE HOUSING AND HOUSING FINANCE IMMIGRANTS AND IMMIGRATION INCOME AND WEALTH JOB MARKET AND LABOR FORCE NEIGHBORHOODS, CITIES, AND METROS RACE, ETHNICITY, AND GENDER SHARE THIS PAGE http://urbn.is/1rr3fkh SHARE Read Next Want to reduce mass incarceration? Do no harm and invest in people and communities SUPPORT URBAN INSTITUTE» ABOUT CONTACT CAREERS 5 of 6 4/5/16, 10:56 AM

NEWSLETTERS PRIVACY TERMS OF SERVICE 6 of 6 4/5/16, 10:56 AM