Buchzusammenfassung
Mitchell Duneier is Maurice P. During Professor of Sociology at Princeton University. He also wrote the award-winning urban ethnographies Sidewalk and Slim’s Table.
The concept of the "ghetto" has evolved over centuries, originating with the forced segregation of Jews in 16th-century Italy, where they were confined to overcrowded, unsanitary districts like Venice’s Ghetto Nuovo. This separation fostered cultural resilience but reinforced stereotypes of poverty and filth, creating a self-justifying cycle of discrimination. Similar patterns emerged in the United States, where systemic racism shaped black ghettos through practices like redlining, restrictive covenants, and discriminatory housing policies. Scholars like Kenneth Clark and Horace Cayton exposed the institutional roots of these ghettos, while figures like Gunnar Myrdal and William Julius Wilson offered contrasting perspectives on race and economic inequality. However, efforts to address these issues were often undermined by political agendas, neglecting the structural racism and poverty that perpetuate these conditions. The enduring legacy of ghettos reflects a history of exclusion and systemic injustice, with responsibility for these inequities still largely unacknowledged.
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