How could Northern California, the wealthiest and most politically progressive region in the United States, become one of the earliest epicenters of the foreclosure crisis? How could this region continuously reproduce racial poverty and reinvent segregation in old farm towns one hundred miles from the urban core?
This is the story of the suburbanization of poverty, the failures of regional planning, urban sprawl, NIMBYism, and political fragmentation between middle class white environmentalists and communities of color. As Alex Schafran shows, the responsibility for this newly segregated geography lies in institutions from across the region, state, and political spectrum, even as the Bay Area has never managed to build common purpose around the making and remaking of its communities, cities, and towns. Schafran closes the book by presenting paths toward a new politics of planning and development that weave scattered fragments into a more equitable and functional whole.
Tabella dei contenuti
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Preface: The Personal and the Political
Introduction: Ghosts in the Machine
1 • The Suburbanization of Segregation
2 • The Postindustrial Garden
3 • The Dougherty Valley Dilemma
4 • The Reproduction of Babylon and the Gentrification Dilemma
5 • Silicon San Francisco and the West Bay Wall
6 • The Altamont Line and the Planning Dilemma
7 • The Regionalist Dream
8 • The Unrealized Coalition
Conclusion: Resegregation and the Pursuit of Common Purpose
Notes
References
Index
Circa l’autore
Alex Schafran writes about urban and regional change. Born and raised in the Bay Area, he is currently Lecturer in Urban Geography at the University of Leeds.Visit alexschafran.com for tour dates and speaking engagements.