"破碎的家":(去)构建亚特兰大早期黑人公共住房家庭流动的道德标准

Akira Drake Rodriguez, Prentiss A. Dantzler
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摘要

20 世纪 30 年代,在为白人和黑人家庭建造第一批开发项目时,公共住房计划被设计为社会经济向上流动的阶梯。与黑人居民相比,白人居民能够以更快的速度储蓄并搬入私人住房,而黑人居民则面临着社会经济地位的外部和内部限制。由于流动性下降,学者和政策制定者很快就将公共住房开发与贫困黑人的封闭性联系起来,将其归类为底层和被困在原地的人的家园。本文采用杜波依斯的方法来了解亚特兰大早期黑人公共住房家庭中形成流动率的分类差异和政治经济条件。本文利用历史文献和约 40 年的行政数据,从佐治亚州亚特兰大市的第一个黑人公共住房开发项目中收集了住房管理人员、杜博伊斯和亚特兰大大学的一组研究助理的资料,研究了内部和外部限制因素是如何影响黑人租户流动性的。文章通过精英住房管理者对贫困黑人家庭的道德判断,展示了住房管理者及其行为是如何影响驱逐率的,并进而影响公共住房促进黑人租户流动性的能力。
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“Broken Home”: (De)constructing the Moral Standards of Mobility for Atlanta’s Early Black Public Housing Families
The public housing program was designed as a stepping-stone into upward socioeconomic mobility when the first developments were constructed for White and Black households in the 1930s. White residents were able to save and move into private housing with greater speed than Black residents, who faced both external and internal constraints on their socioeconomic status. As a result of this decreased mobility, scholars and policymakers soon associated public housing developments with impoverished Black containment, categorizing it as the home of the underclass and those who are stuck in place. This article employs a Du Boisian approach to understand the categorical differences and political economic conditions shaping mobility rates among Atlanta’s early Black public housing families. Using historical documents and approximately 40 years of administrative data collected from the first Black public housing development in Atlanta, Georgia by housing managers, Du Bois, and a group of research assistants from Atlanta University, this article examines how internal and external constraints shaped Black tenant mobility. It demonstrates how housing administrators and their actions shaped eviction rates—and by default, public housing’s ability to advance Black tenant mobility—through elite housing managers’ moral judgments of impoverished Black families.
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