Crossing the Class and Color Lines
From Public Housing to White Suburbia
With Shirley Dvorin, Marilynn Kulieke, Alicia McCareins, and Susan Popkin
256 pages, 7 tables 6 x 9
©
2000
Cloth $32.00
ISBN: 9780226730899
Published May 2000
Paper $21.00
ISBN: 9780226730905
Published April 2002
From 1976 to 1998, the Gautreaux Assisted Housing Program moved over 7,000 low-income black families from Chicago's inner city to middle-class white suburbs—the largest and longest-running residential, racial, and economic integration effort in American history. Crossing the Class and Color Lines is the story of that project, from the initial struggles and discomfort of the relocated families to their eventual successes in employment and education—cementing the sociological concept of the "neighborhood effect" and shattering the myth that inner-city blacks cannot escape a "culture of poverty."
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