Public Housing Essay

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    Mauritius: Social Housing Social Movement and Low Income Housing in Mauritius Abstract: The Republic of Mauritius has been a model success story in both economic and social progress among both the African nations and the whole world. Despite many odds, the country has made tremendous economic progress and has succeeded at the same time to uplift significantly the living standards of the population in general. This paper gives an overview of the matter of the low-income housing in Mauritius. The first

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    El Paso

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    some might see El Paso as a ghost town filled with run-down building in the middle of nowhere, this city is replete with fun activities. El Paso presents a great escape, gives vast job opportunities to young people, and offers wonderfully affordable housing. El Paso has many enjoyable adventures. Pamela Porter quotes Mike Episcopo saying, “You've got 2 million peopl in the El Paso-Juarez area, but when you get up in the canyons, it's like you'r in the middle of nowhere” (qtd. in Porter 1). To some,

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    Race and Gentrification Is gentrification causing segregation in urban cities? The majority of modern day cities are in a state of steady gentrification. Many people believe that gentrification is making the city more modern, safe, and appealing to other people. However, these people in their naivety fail to comprehend the hidden consequences and impact of gentrification on various ethnic groups and low-income families. Gentrification is a master of disguise that hides itself with assumed correlations

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    down the options to two cities its important to look at similarities and differences. Although El Paso, Texas and London, England are similar in their cheap housing and exuberant job opportunities, they differ in their getaways, job opportunities, and housing. El Paso and London are very similar in that the cities don 't only offer housing at a very affordable rate, but also have created ways to employ its citizens. The similarities between the cities affordable homes is that both are using cheaper

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    the manufacturing jobs that still exist provide low wages. With residents earning less money than their urban counterparts, housing is in some cases less obtainable than in metropolitan areas. Income and Poverty in the United States from 2015 (Procter et al). With nearly "three of every four rural poor households paying at least 30 percent of their incomes for housing and with substantial numbers paying 50 percent and even 70 percent -- little money is left for other necessities" (Lazere, 22)

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    Policy Public housing in St. Louis was always used as a segregation tool that the city did everything in its power in order to prevent what was called “Negro DE-concentration”, making African-Americans moving out of particular neighborhoods. Every project was imagined as a white or black project, and they were actually placed on the map in St Louis in ways that deep in the pockets of segregation in one place or the other is a way to really radically separate whites from blacks in ways that no other

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    Chicago’s Cabrini-Green public housing project is notorious in the United States for being the most impoverished and crime-ridden public housing development ever established. Originally established as inexpensive housing in the 1940’s, it soon became a vast complex of unsightly concrete low and high-rise apartment structures. Originally touted as a giant step forward in the development of public housing, it quickly changed from a racially and economically diverse housing complex to a predominantly

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    After World War II returning veterans faced a shortage of affordable housing at home. The Housing Act of 1949 was passed in order to remedy the situation. Unfortunately, the act led to unforeseen complications that would exacerbate the urban crisis farther. Affordable high-rise housing built as a result of the act would force people who could afford it to move out into the growing suburbs and the poor devour the structures. As a result of displacement and previous Supreme Court decisions blockbusters

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    Hong Kong 's City Planning

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    Throughout the past 60 years, Hong Kong’s city planning were tightly dependent on the growth of public housing complexes, and vice versa. Years after the first public housing estate, Shek Kip Mei estate was built, the government has studied and discovered that core districts, Kowloon and the northern part of Hong Kong Island, have been rapidly populated that they are reaching their maximum capacity due to the wave of baby boom and illegal immigrants from Mainland China who escape to Hong Kong for

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    Housing Desegregation

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    answering preliminary questions of: What is housing segregation and what are the problems, as a result? What are the casual effects on modern community planning? Can solutions be implemented to desegregate housing for community planning in the future? The intended use of this framework will be to influence both policy makers and community planners toward desegregation. Keywords: Community Planning; Housing Segregation; White Flight; Racial

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