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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Susan J. Popkin , Kathryn Edin, Bloomberg Distinguished Professor, Department of Sociology, Johns Hopkins UPublisher: Rowman & Littlefield Imprint: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.20cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.245kg ISBN: 9780810895362ISBN 10: 0810895366 Pages: 160 Publication Date: 01 November 2017 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsForeword Acknowledgments Chapter One: Transforming Public Housing, Changing Residents’ Lives Chapter Two: Transforming the CHA Chapter Three: Better Housing, Safer Neighborhoods? Chapter Four: The Hard to House Chapter Five: Reaching the Next Generation Chapter Six: No Simple Solutions Bibliography Index About the AuthorReviewsApplied sociologist Popkin presents vivid snapshots portraying the lived experiences of individuals, families, and neighborhoods impacted by public housing policies and revitalization efforts. In 1999, Chicago embarked on an ambitious venture: to rid the city of distressed and deteriorating public housing developments and their accompaniments, including crime, failing schools, crumbling infrastructures, and failed dreams. Popkin builds on her decades of research in Chicago's public housing developments to answer the fundamental question of what the Plan for Transformation meant to Chicago Housing Authority families. In several longitudinal studies, Popkin and her team of researchers conducted surveys and in-depth interviews with hundreds of families and found that transforming the lives of public housing residents requires a more holistic approach that goes far beyond building new housing developments. Documenting the experiences of `hard to house' families, Popkin demonstrates the need to combine housing assistance with meaningful services targeted at individual and family needs. A must-read for students, practitioners, and researchers interested in housing policy from the ground up. Summing Up: Essential. Upper-division undergraduates and above. * CHOICE * No Simple Solutions by Susan Popkin shows that most displaced residents have benefited, but a significant minority has been hurt. The book does a great job in presenting cutting edge social research, while tracing the remarkably important role that the author (who has over 30 years of experience studying CHA residents) and her colleagues played in shaping the social service component of Chicago's public housing transformation.... I cannot overemphasize the value of this qualitative research.... Unlike other public housing books that end with a `gloom and doom' scenario, Popkin urges readers to press on and to make incremental improvements.... Because No Simple Solutions represents the first major book on the conditions of HOPE VI relocatees, I recommend it to housing scholars and practitioners on both sides of the Atlantic. * Journal of Housing and the Built Environment * Epic and encyclopedic, this vital book illuminates the human drama induced by Chicago's bold Plan for Transformation. Multiple surveys conducted over more than 15 years' time, plus vivid in-depth interviews that put skin on the numbers, reveal a remarkable, surprising, and ultimately hopeful story. Award-winning author Susan Popkin delivers an essential read for anyone who cares about how our nation attends to the housing needs of the poor. -- Kathryn Edin, Bloomberg Distinguished Professor, Department of Sociology, Johns Hopkins University Susan Popkin's clear-eyed, succinct, and compassionate book focuses on the children and parents who suffered through the intolerable conditions of Chicago's public housing, and then navigated the complex attempts to transform it. With Popkin's unique perspective gained from following families for more than a decade, No Easy Solutions provides a deeply well informed guide to what is needed next. -- Lawrence J. Vale, Ford Professor of Urban Design and Planning, Massachusetts Institute of Technology This important new book offers a hopeful but unflinching account of one of America's most ambitious and also misunderstood efforts to transform ghetto poverty in a major city. In this vivid and accessible account, we learn the real impacts on highly disadvantaged parents and their children over time-and what does and does not make a difference in their lives. Sue Popkin is one of our most astute, seasoned, and dedicated observers of vulnerable families in low-income housing. Her new book is required reading. -- Xavier de Souza Briggs, Vice President, Ford Foundation and Professor of Sociology and Planning, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Author InformationSusan Popkin is a senior fellow and director of the Neighborhoods and Youth Development initiative in the Metropolitan Housing and Communities Policy Center at the Urban Institute. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |