Black Community Essay

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    The community we decided to look at is in the north Crown Heights section of Brooklyn. The area we decided to focus on the surrounding blocks around the St. John’s Recreation center. The blocks we examine are from Utica Avenue & Albany Avenue and Park Place & Bergen Street. Our team decided to use this community due to most of the group members live and/or are familiar with this community. Being familiar with how the community used to have high crime rates, drug infested that housed many low income

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    Bidleville Case Study

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    Biddleville like many “ring villages”, was a community that shared a distinct southern uniqueness in that it was one of a dozen villages or communities that were established on the edge or outer ring of the city. Founded after the Civil War around the college, the community was established with assistance and major influence in the 1890’s by the Myers family. A prominent white family, who touted the community as a “Model Negro housing development”. The early make up of this village derived from post-war

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    A community is where a group of people with many different backgrounds are united by one common thing. College and universities think putting young adults on a campus where they eat, sleep and learn together will make them become one community. Communities are made from within not from outside forces smashing people together. Florida Atlantic has many communities inside of it created by people who have the same interests in life. FAU doesn't have one set community as a whole because they are mostly

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    are using their talents as a source of revenue. Further, through the history of music, hip-hop has been considered a representative of the voice of the black community. Although, some critics dispute that the commercialization of hip-hop diminishes its original message because now the genre no longer actually symbolizes the voice of the black community. Thus, Hip-hop does not have the power of influence due to commercialization, but a hip-hop artists pledge to influencing the public’s perspective or

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    A plural society defines social structure that consist/comprises of different communities, races, cultures or other social groupings. A plural society is formed when one or more different integrate into one singular society. Although a plural society is a grouping of differences, it seems being a plural society only serves to make them more distinct from each other. From the early uses of the label plural society, there seems not an intention for it serve as a complete integration, but their coexistence

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    working-class waterfront community into a notorious hotbed of drug-related violence, cut off from the rest of New York City and the rest of Brooklyn by an elevated highway and a lack of public transportation, the citizens of Red Hook were despite for a much needed change. By looking at the success that followed from Manhattan’s first community court, the citizens of Red Hook believed that the same success could be achieved in their neighborhood as well. Thus, in the year 2000, the community of Red Hook opened

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    Miss Simpson Reflection

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    Lockwood was a predominately African-American neighborhood. It was a neighborhood where neighbors would speak during encounters, participate in engagements in the community, take walks around the block, entertain each other in their homes, and watch after the children. Essentially, it was more than a neighborhood. It was a community. Fast forward to 2017, things are different at first sight. New houses that scream, “Gentrification” are being built on almost every block. At first, they seem to be

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    African- American women faced in the small communities of South Carolina which included low self-esteem, premature death for many of which could have been prevented, or halter. A program in place that allowed for early treatment and recognition with better screening protocols for breast and cervical cancer could have save many lives. This is why creating a program that provides quality of care as the Black Corals program did for the citizens in the small communities of South Carolina, which allowed some

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    Food Desert

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    Chicago’s most stable middle-class residential districts” (Skerrett 2005). Black families during the 1950s and 60s started moving south as there was the historical “white flight”, leaving these communities mainly black. Beverly, however, was the expectation, as many black families did not come immediately here (Moore 2014). Demographically today, Beverly is 57% white, 35% black, and 5.6% Hispanic, making it the 15th largest white community in the city of Chicago, with most of these individuals are of

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    diversity has improved through a community garden that is taking place in an empty lot. The community is a diverse place, that eventually comes together through a vietnamese girl named Kim. Kim gathers the community together through growing plants by planting lima beans to show her passed father that she can take after his footsteps. When this action occurred, it created a domino effect by other neighbors around the area joining in on the growth of their small community. The book symbolizes how societal

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