
Excluded
How Snob Zoning, NIMBYism, and Class Bias Build the Walls We Don't See
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Narrado por:
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Graham Winton
An indictment of America's housing policy that reveals the social engineering underlying our segregation by economic class, the social and political fallout that result, and what we can do about it
The last acceptable form of prejudice in America is based on class and executed through state-sponsored economic discrimination, which is hard to see because it is much more subtle than raw racism.
While the American meritocracy officially denounces prejudice based on race and gender, it has spawned a new form of bias against those with less education and income. Millions of working-class Americans have their opportunity blocked by exclusionary snob zoning. These government policies make housing unaffordable, frustrate the goals of the civil rights movement, and lock in inequality in our urban and suburban landscapes.
Through moving accounts of families excluded from economic and social opportunity as they are hemmed in through “new redlining” that limits the type of housing that can be built, Richard Kahlenberg vividly illustrates why America has a housing crisis. He also illustrates why economic segregation matters since where you live affects access to transportation, employment opportunities, decent health care, and good schools. He shows that housing choice has been socially engineered to the benefit of the affluent, and, that astonishingly the most restrictive zoning is found in politically liberal cities where racial views are more progressive.
Despite this there is hope. Kahlenberg tells the inspiring stories of growing number of local and national movements working to tear down the walls that inflicts so much damage on the lives of millions of Americans.
©2023 Richard D. Kahlenberg (P)2023 PublicAffairsListeners also enjoyed...




















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My only disagreement is with his view on expanding the suburbs. He takes a traditionally liberal view that sprawl leads to more pollution and environmental effects, but does not discuss the benefits to mental health of living in less densely packed areas or address how the EV revolution should diminish the majority of environmental concerns about sprawl. Land zoned as farm land and more government owned land should be zoned to allow for home building. Farmers choosing to sell land in areas that people want to live is natural. Usually, farming moves to less productive areas where people don’t want to live which is how societies and cities have grown since ancient times. My view is that nearly all home building is good building. Societies that don’t grow decay, as the rise of homelessness has so vividly illustrated.
This Book is a Solid Step Forward For America
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Exclusionary Housing Policy: The core problem facing America in 2024
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Everyone should read
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Great book I hope everyone reads this
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