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008 210202b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aLung-Amam, Willow
_942153
245 _aMi Casa no es Su Casa: The Fight for Equitable Transit-Oriented Development in an Inner-Ring Suburb
260 _bSage,
_c2019.
300 _aVol 39, Issue 4, 2019( 442-455 p.)
520 _aTransit-oriented development (TOD) often raises land values and can promote gentrification and the displacement in low-income communities. Little research, however, has shown how communities have organized to fight for more equitable TOD processes and outcomes within particular metropolitan contexts and dynamics of neighborhood change. This case study examines the role of neighborhood-based advocacy and organizing in fighting for equitable TOD and tackling key political and planning challenges in a predominantly Latinx immigrant inner-ring suburb. Their successes show the strengths of community-based, cross-sector coalitions in generating more equitable and inclusive TOD processes, plans, and policies that target conditions of place-based precarity.
650 _adisplacement, equitable transit-oriented development,
_942154
650 _aHispanic or Latino communities,
_933793
650 _a immigrant or immigration,
_933839
650 _asuburban decline,
_934386
650 _asuburban poverty,
_934386
650 _a transit-induced
_942155
700 _aPendall, Rolf
_942156
773 0 _011153
_915496
_dSage, 2019.
_tJournal of Planning Education and Research
856 _uhttps://doi.org/10.1177/0739456X19878248
942 _2ddc
_cART