Gentrification has become a familiar story in cities across the United States. The story line typically goes this way: Middle- and upper-income people start moving into a lower-income or poor neighborhood. Housing prices rise in response, and longtime residents and businesses are driven out.As the U.S. population becomes increasingly urban, gentrification can seem inevitable. However, scholars have found that Read More…
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Another major disaster for Georgia faces a week after Hurricane Helene
Seventeen thousand people were evacuated from the area, and around 90,000 more were ordered to shelter in place as an ominous smoke column loomed over the county and spewed chlorine gas throughout the week. This took place after scores of Georgia residents already reeling from Hurricane Helene have been grappling with fallout from another disaster Read More…
68-year-old retiree pays $460 a month to live by a lake in Mexico:
68-year-old retiree pays $460 a month to live by a lake in Mexico: ‘I found the peace and tranquility I was looking for’ My mornings in the small village of San Antonio Tlayacapan, Mexico, are filled with birds. There’s the soft cooing of doves, the chirping of kiskadees, and the iconic shrieking of roosters, which Read More…
GREAT DIVIDE: America’s Failure to Divorce Revitalization from Gentrification
Neighborhoods Don’t Have to Be Rich to Be Healthy and VibrantA Rhode Island Community Speaks to America’s Failure to Divorce Revitalization from Gentrification By Joseph Margulies When it comes to neighborhood well-being, is failure the inevitable cost of success? In its salad days, Olneyville was home to a thriving textile industry in Providence, Rhode Island. Read More…
‘Crying for their parents’
‘Crying for their parents’: More than 900 children died at Indian boarding schools, U.S. report finds Afederal investigation has confirmed that more than 900 American Indian, Alaska Native and Native Hawaiian children perished in U.S. government boarding schools from 1819 to 1969, acknowledging that the actual toll is undoubtedly higher and recommending an official apology. “Based on Read More…
I’m a Black vegan. Why don’t you see more of us?
People of color are more likely to be vegan. But the animal rights movement still has a white face. by Noella Williams Mark Harris for Vox; Photos by Alexandra Genova for Vox, Getty Images Noella Williams is a Brooklyn-based freelance culture writer whose writing has appeared in Marie Claire, Teen Vogue, the Washington Post, and elsewhere. Read More…








