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Axe 1 - Identités et échanges
Axe 2 - Diversité et inclusion
Axe 3 - Art et pouvoir
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Unit 3
Activity 1

What lies behind the redline?

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1
Mapping inequality

Placeholder pour The 1938 Home Owners' Loan Corporation map of Brooklyn.The 1938 Home Owners' Loan Corporation map of Brooklyn.

The Home Owners' Loan Corporation map of Brooklyn, 1938.

Vidéo associée
From 0:00 to 2:19
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2
From redlined to gentrified

Titre audio £



Placeholder pour Don't Gentrify East New YorkDon't Gentrify East New York

Doug Chayka, Don't Gentrify East New York, 2013.


    Gentrification is the influx of higher-income, more educated, and mostly white residents into a traditionally low-income, minority neighborhood. Gentrification may increase access to physical and institutional improvements like grocery stores over mini-marts, public parks over empty lots, or coffee shops over liquor stores. While these changes can improve the living conditions and amenities of neighborhoods, they come at higher costs of living and are not equally accessible to all residents, especially low-income and racial/ethnic minorities.
    Why do communities gentrify? Historically redlined areas often exhibit a “rent gap” – the difference between the potential value of the property and the current prices of housing. The prime location of urban housing paired with historical underinvestment and low rent prices make them attractive to young career professionals, developers, and investors looking to capitalize on the gap in property values. In San Francisco, 87% of neighborhoods undergoing gentrification were once redlined as “hazardous.”
H. De los Santos, K. Jiang, J. Bernardi, C. Okechukwu, Harvard Medical School, May 2021.
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Questions
1
Watch the video. List key dates in the history of redlining. How did these government decisions affect the mapping of cities?
2
Explain the meaning of the different colors on the map. What does it show about the U.S. cities in the 1930s? What do the colors represent?
3
Read the text. Note the definition of gentrification. Why does gentrification often happen in previously redlined neighborhoods?
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Background check

How has redlining impacted cities and their inhabitants and what consequences are still visible today?
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Culture note

Gentrification comes from gentry, a word for people of higher social status. In the UK, the “landed gentry” were landowners who lived from the renting income of their properties.
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Let's learn!

Choose a word related to housing, which you've read or heard in this activity (redlining, rent, neighborhood…). Give your classmates a definition of the word and see if they can guess it!

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