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Baltimore Revisited: Stories of Inequality and Resistance in a U.S. City

Contributor(s): King, P Nicole (Editor), Drabinski, Kate (Editor), Davis, Joshua Clark (Editor), Brown, Lawrence (Contribution by), Buccino, Daniel L (Contribution by), Casiano, Michael (Contribution by), Collins, Sam (Contribution by), Darrow, Shannon (Contribution by), Durington, Matthew (Contribution by), Fabricant, Nicole (Contribution by), Faust, Aiden (Contribution by), Ferretti, Jennifer A (Contribution by), Fredrickson, Leif (Contribution by), Gamble, Robert (Contribution by), Gomez, Marisela (Contribution by), Householder, April K (Contribution by), Kelber- Kaye, Jodi (Contribution by), Kelley, Louise Parker (Contribution by), Lieb, Emily (Contribution by), Levin, Jacob R (Contribution by), Méndez, Teresa (Contribution by), Minner, Ashley (Contribution by), Nix, Elizabeth M (Contribution by), Otten, Richard E (Contribution by), Pousson, Eli (Contribution by), Rizzo, Mary (Contribution by), Scharmen, Fred (Contribution by), Shin, Aletheia Hyun-Jin (Contribution by), Shopes, Linda (Contribution by), Stefano, Michelle L (Contribution by), Tropea, Joe (Contribution by), Zanoni, Amy (Contribution by), Meringolo, Denise (Contribution by), Headley, Robert (Contribution by), Stocks, Shawntay (Contribution by)

ISBN: 9780813594026

Publisher: Rutgers University Press

Hardcover
$150.00
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Pub Date: August 9, 2019

Dewey: 307.76097526

LCCN: 2018037166

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Price on Product

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 1.10" H x 9.10" L x 6.20" W ( 1.50 lbs) 378 pages

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: Nicknamed both "Mobtown" and "Charm City," Baltimore is a city of contradictions. To help untangle those apparent paradoxes, Baltimore Revisited assembles over thirty experts, both from inside and outside academia. Together, they find that the city has become ground zero for neoliberal policies, but also home to intensely engaged resistance movements.

Review Quotes: "Baltimore Revisited presents an important and compelling portrait of Baltimore's past to advocate a more just present and future. Not just a book about Baltimore, this collection can serve as a roadmap for scholars, students, and civic leaders seeking to understand how cities take the shape they do and what can be done to challenge those patterns when they deny justice to citizens."

--Rebecca K. Shrum "associate professor of history, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis"

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