Publication | Closed Access
Urban Regeneration and Public Housing in New Orleans
32
Citations
22
References
1995
Year
Local Economic DevelopmentSustainable Urban HousingUrban DevelopmentSocial SciencesUrban SpaceUrban GovernanceUrban HistoryUrban PoliticsHousingPublic PolicyUrban PolicyCentral Business DistrictUrban PlanningPublic HousingUrban RegenerationEquitable DevelopmentUrban GeographyUrban EconomicsNew OrleansHousing PolicyPolitical Science
Public housing, if located proximate to the central business district or other valued development sites, is often seen as a threat to urban regeneration activities. Growth coalitions may develop strategies to remove the threat to increase the value of the land and probability of reinvestment. In cities with an African-American majority electorate, like New Orleans, the electoral coalition of the governing regime is inherently unstable and has to pursue its development strategies carefully. Public housing poses a more intractable political barrier to regeneration strategies than do privately owned slum neighborhoods. In New Orleans, the governing coalition has been forced to retreat to its previously faltering spatial-containment policy.
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