Affiliation:
1. University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, USA
Abstract
In this report, I focus on property, particularly housing, as an essential race-making institution and consider its connections to the carceral state. I examine renewed attention to property within geography and some of the ways that scholars are engaging with property regimes as a means to theorize race. Situating property within the context of racial capitalism and critical carceral studies, I draw from struggles over segregation and open housing in Milwaukee, Wisconsin to illustrate the linkages between the city’s housing crisis and policing. A robust body of literature documents the inseparability of race and crime, but I further contend that both are conjoined with the politics of residential property.
Subject
Geography, Planning and Development
Cited by
105 articles.
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1. Bibliography;Judicial Territory;2024-09-13
2. Notes;Judicial Territory;2024-09-13
3. List of Cases and Auxiliary Case Documents;Judicial Territory;2024-09-13
4. Selected Timeline of the Expansion of US Judicial Territory;Judicial Territory;2024-09-13
5. Conclusion;Judicial Territory;2024-09-13