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Colored property: state policy and white racial politics in suburban America
David M. P. Freund
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Frontmatter
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Acknowledgments (page ix)
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ONE / The New Politics of Race and Property (page 1)
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PART I : THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF SUBURBAN DEVELOPMENT AND THE RACE OF ECONOMIC VALUE, 1910-1970
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TWO / Local Control and the Rights of Property: The Politics of Incorporation, Zoning, and Race before 1940 (page 45)
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THREE / Financing Suburban Growth: Federal Policy and the Birth of a Racialized Market for Homes, 1930-1940 (page 99)
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FOUR / Putting Private Capital Back to Work: The Logic of Federal Intervention, 1930-1940 (page 140)
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FIVE / A Free Market for Housing: Policy, Growth, and Exclusion in Suburbia, 1940-1970 (page 176)
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PART II : RACE AND DEVELOPMENT IN METROPOLITAN DETROIT, 1940-1970
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SIX / Defending and Defining the New Neighborhood: The Politics of Exclusion in Royal Oak, 1940-1955 (page 243)
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SEVEN / Saying Race Out Loud: The Politics of Exclusion in Dearborn, 1940-1955 (page 284)
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EIGHT / The National Is Local: Race and Development in an Era of Civil Rights Protest, 1955-1964 (page 328)
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NINE / Colored Property and White Backlash (page 382)
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Abbreviations (page 401)
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Notes (page 405)
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Index (page 489)
Journal Abbreviation | Label | URL |
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JIH | 39.4 (Spring 2009): 618-619 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/40263584 |
RAH | 36.2 (Jun. 2008): 259-269 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/40210920 |
Citable Link
Published: c2007
Publisher: The University of Chicago Press
- 9780226262758 (hardcover)
- 9780226262765 (paper)
- 9780226262772 (ebook)