How Does Concentrated Poverty Affect Every Experience
5
When Work Disappears
6
Research in Chicago
7
Food deserts
8
Evidence
9
Starting from the ground
10
Bill Wilson
11
Institutionalization
12
Social Isolation
13
Harlem
14
Empty blocks
15
Venice Lounge
16
Harlem Population Density
17
Harlem Safety
18
Harlem Geography
19
Harlem Statistics
20
Statistics
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Rust Belt
22
Large Grocery Stores
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Poor Neighborhoods
24
Chicago
25
Home Depot
26
Walmart
27
Organizational Density
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Complexity of Cities
29
The Harlem Model
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Median Home Values
31
Cost of Living
32
Crime
33
Theorizing from Difference
34
Ghettoization
35
Consequences
36
What do we need
37
Big data
38
Institutional infrastructure
39
Policy disease
Description:
Explore the impact of urban inequality on poverty in this 41-minute Harper Lecture by Mario L. Small, Dean of the Division of Social Sciences at the University of Chicago. Examine how the Great Recession affected American cities differently, leading to varying rates of recovery and disparities in local safety nets. Delve into the question of whether escaping poverty is more challenging in certain urban ghettos than others. Learn about Small's field research in high-poverty neighborhoods and his analysis of how being born in a particular city can be as impactful as one's income bracket. Gain insights into urban poverty, social capital, personal networks, and the relationship between qualitative and quantitative social science methods. Discover how factors such as food deserts, population density, safety, geography, and organizational density contribute to the complexity of urban poverty. Consider the implications of these findings for policy-making and the need for big data and improved institutional infrastructure to address urban inequality effectively.
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Are Some Cities More Punishing for Low-Income Families? - Urban Inequality and Poverty