Can COVID-19 Reopening Plans Mitigate Cycles of Residential Displacement?

Shawnna L. Thomas-EL
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Abstract

This article uses interviews of long-standing neighborhood residents’ sentiments of university expansion into their community. These data provide persuasive empirical evidence for the need of urban anchor institutions to include as an integral component of their campus reopening efforts, intentional plans for reducing the disruption of housing patterns of permanent residents. The term COVID exposure has come to signify not only the potential to succumb to the virus, but it also implies the revealing of inequities in systems that impact the effects of the crisis within Black and Brown communities. Every sector of U.S. society has been impacted by COVID-19, and it has required a paradigm shift in our interactions with one another. Academic institutions are enacting robust de-densification efforts which will stimulate dramatic shifts in the off-campus housing needs for students, but they stand the chance of displacing or further disadvantaging the long-standing residents who reside outside of their campus border. Universities must use reopening plans as an instrument to change the trajectory of relationships they hope to cultivate with their long-standing neighbors, through renewed engagement efforts that integrate lessons from the past and that seek to build stronger neighborhoods by challenging housing inequity and housing inequality.
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新冠肺炎重新开放计划能否缓解居民流离失所的周期?
本文采用了对长期居住在社区的居民对大学扩展到他们社区的看法的访谈。这些数据提供了有说服力的经验证据,说明城市锚定机构需要将减少永久居民住房模式中断的有意计划作为其校园重新开放努力的组成部分。COVID暴露一词不仅意味着屈服于病毒的可能性,而且还意味着揭示了影响黑人和棕色社区危机影响的系统中的不公平现象。美国社会的各个领域都受到了新冠疫情的影响,这要求我们在相互交往中转变模式。学术机构正在制定强有力的去致密化措施,这将刺激学生校外住房需求的巨大变化,但它们有可能取代或进一步使长期居住在校园外的居民处于不利地位。大学必须把重新开放计划作为一种工具,改变它们希望与长期邻居培养的关系轨迹,通过新的接触努力,整合过去的经验教训,寻求通过挑战住房不平等和住房不平等来建立更强大的社区。
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20
审稿时长
26 weeks
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