The Politics of Public Housing

About The Book

In this collective biography Rhonda Y. Williams takes us behind and beyond politically expedient labels to provide an incisive and intimate portrait of poor black women in urban America. Drawing on dozens of interviews Williams challenges the notion that low-income housing was a resounding failure that doomed three consecutive generations of post-war Americans to entrenched poverty. Instead she recovers a history of grass-roots activism of political awakening and of class mobility all facilitated by the creation of affordable public housing. The stereotyping of black women especially mothers has obscured a complicated and nuanced reality too often warped by the political agendas of both the left and the right and has prevented an accurate understanding of the successes and failures of government anti-poverty policy.
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