Public Housing Essay

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    Clean Public Housing

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    Lack of access to safe, clean public housing reinforces the cyclical nature of poverty. According to a GAO study, “In 2005, 37 million people, approximately 13 percent of the total population, lived below the poverty line, as defined by the Census Bureau” (POVERTY, 2). This is partially caused by the inadequate housing conditions poor families are essentially forced to live in. The slum landlords managing these properties take advantage of these families’ situations and are oppressive and manipulative

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    be a lawbreaker. Moreover, based on how our society informally defines a criminal or lawbreaker, JT is clearly someone who does not or will not conform with our collective legal standards or requirements based on the majority opinion of the wider public. However, in contrast to this majority opinion, based on an article by Ballmann (2008) pertaining to the laws that define food culture, we find that based on these rules or laws of food etiquette in the unbuilt libraries of unpublished books of unwritten

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    The United States is often referred to as a ‘reluctant welfare state.’ There are various reasons for this description. One of the primary reasons for this is the differences and diversity of the political parties which are the motivating forces that control government. The Liberal Party, for instance supports government safety nets and social service programs for those in need. “Liberals believe in government action to achieve equal opportunity and equality for all.” ("Studentnews," 2006) They

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    history, and lastly a prefilled resume format form. Moreover, we should aim to help the homeless reinstate themselves back into society. We do not want to enable anyone to take advantage of this housing opportunity. But to utilize it to gain a path towards a better quality of living. Additionally, the housing units themselves will not be in an apartment setting or anything of that nature. But instead, more so a studio type of setting with basic amenities to include: a bed, kitchen area, a small storage

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    According to Curley (2005), urban poverty has been a huge issue for hundreds of years. The people living in inner-city neighborhoods were the primary target for poverty. It had a tremendous effect on the black population; it increased by 164 percent in ten years alone. Finding a job became hardly impossible. Therefore, neighborhoods began to segregate, leaving the disadvantaged poor behind. The neighborhoods relied on welfare to make ends meets. This resulted in an increase in crime rates (p

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    Government only financed a small amount of the action, mainly public housing for the lowest income. Due to the high land values, many of the low-income families could not afford these new houses; many of them remained unoccupied. Private developers continued to build though, as the demand for higher income houses was

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    A few years ago, Vancouver’s first social housing project, Little Mountain, was bulldozed for a social mixing neighbourhood, in which geared towards those with higher incomes than the site’s original residents. This event was foreshadowed by the dramatic changes that happened early on in the 80s when the city began transforming itself into a global city by taking in wealthy Asian immigrants and their capital, in which were dedicated to Vancouver’s real estate market. Like many cities across North

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    social division, according to Oxford (2013), “social mobility has fallen rapidly in many country as inequality has grown.” Oxford (2013) argues that the wealthy focus only on better education and healthcare for their own families, rather than helping “public services or paying the taxes to support them.” If the division continues, then there will be a side of “social ills, including violence, mental health, crime and obesity.” Oxford (2013) also states that “unequal societies” not only negatively affect

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    Don Mitchell Analysis

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    In “New Axioms for Reading the Landscape: Paying Attention to Political Economy and Social Justice,” Don Mitchell incorporates old ideas from Peirce F. Lewis’s original “Axioms for Reading the Landscape.” At the same time, Mitchell includes new ideas into his axioms. In Axiom 1, he explains that “the landscape is not produced through ‘our unwitting autobiography’ (as Lewis describes it), but as an act of (social, not individual) will” (2007, 34). He also stresses the idea that landscape should be

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    “Housing in Context – The Right to Buy” Report for Management Board prepared by Caroline Peters, June 2017 1. Introduction 1.1 Report purpose 1.2 Housing Policy 1.3 Report Content 1.4 Report Summary 2. The Right to Buy 2.1 Historical Policy 2.2 The Right to Buy 1980 3. Legislative Framework 3.1 Legislation 3.2 Further Legislative amendments 3.3 Extension of Right to Buy 4. Comparative Study – The Right to Buy Wales 4.1 Historical Policy 4.2 Legislative framework 4.3 Abolition of

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