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A Detroit Story

Urban Decline and the Rise of Property Informality

Claire W. Herbert

$49.95

Paperback

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English
University of California Press
16 March 2021
Bringing to the fore a wealth of original research, A Detroit Story examines how the reclamation of abandoned property has been shaping the city for decades. Herbert lived in Detroit for almost five years to get a ground-view sense of how this process molds urban areas—participating in community meetings and tax foreclosure protests, interviewing various groups, following scrappers through abandoned buildings, and visiting squatted houses and gardens. Herbert found that there’s a disjunction between different types of property reclaimers: lifestyle back-to-the-earth new residents, primarily more privileged, whose practices are often formalized by local policies, and longtime more disempowered residents, often representing communities of color, whose practices are marked as illegal and illegitimate. She teases out how the divergent treatment of these two approaches to informally claiming property reproduces long-standing inequalities in race, class, and property ownership. More generally, A Detroit Story examines how the attempt to formalize property informality in cities harms the most vulnerable.

By:  
Imprint:   University of California Press
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm,  Spine: 20mm
Weight:   454g
ISBN:   9780520340084
ISBN 10:   0520340086
Pages:   316
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Claire Herbert is Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of Oregon.

Reviews for A Detroit Story: Urban Decline and the Rise of Property Informality

An exceptional piece of urban ethnography. . . . While one might be tempted to situate such a countermovement in the gentrification literature, Herbert's work insists on a more complex interpretation, one that could extend the immense amount she has already taught us about property relations under duress. * Social Forces * This is an important book. * AAG Review of Books * A Detroit Story is an original and engaging book on a well-researched city. . . . [It] provides an invaluable contribution to urban studies research and is relevant for researchers in myriad disciplines as well as upper division undergraduate and graduate students. Anyone with an interest in Detroit and shrinking cities, as well as planners and policymakers who work in these contexts, will also appreciate the assessment of how-albeit unintentionally-planning and policy can and will reproduce inequality if they fail to recognize how people live and why. * International Journal of Urban Regional Research * A Detroit Story is a deeply, even lovingly, Detroit-focused book. There is a risk in studying such a unique and fascinating place: informality in Detroit is at once relatively well-trodden ground and at the same time not obviously full of parallels for other cities or broader concepts. Yet Herbert points this out, makes connections to other postgrowth cities, and makes the excellent point that property informality is enacted and experienced differently across social contexts. The result is a uniquely sociological contribution to the literature on urban informality and to how we understand property outside of real estate. * American Journal of Sociology *


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