Nonprofit Neighborhoods: An Urban History Of Inequality And The American State (Historical Studies Of Urban America) - 9780226819891

University of Chicago Press
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9780226819891
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9780226819891
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Claire Dunning's study focuses on the relationship between state power and nonprofit organizations in the postwar era and on the effects their dynamics have had on urban neighborhoods. She reveals how public-private partnerships positioned nonprofits as surprisingly powerful intermediaries between the state and individuals. These nonprofits took the lead in combatting urban poverty-and yet, counterintuitively, the intended devolution and decentralization of power from the state to the community level made the welfare state both larger and more impersonal and financialized. Thus, even as participation in antipoverty programs increased, the structural forces behind urban poverty became only more entrenched--


  • | Author: Claire Dunning
  • | Publisher: University of Chicago Press
  • | Publication Date: Jun 23, 2022
  • | Number of Pages: 351 pages
  • | Language: English
  • | Binding: Paperback/History
  • | ISBN-10: 0226819892
  • | ISBN-13: 9780226819891
Author:
Claire Dunning
Publisher:
University of Chicago Press
Publication Date:
Jun 23, 2022
Number of pages:
351 pages
Language:
English
Binding:
Paperback/History
ISBN-10:
0226819892
ISBN-13:
9780226819891