掠夺性包容和弗林特水危机

Kenyon P. Cavender
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引用次数: 0

摘要

2014年,密歇根州弗林特市的居民开始体验到持续数年的弗林特水危机的第一个影响。由于市政府和州政府对破损的基础设施管理不善,以及严厉的紧缩措施,成千上万的儿童暴露在饮用水中铅含量超标的环境中。虽然人们常常把责任归咎于当时负责的官员,但弗林特的历史揭示了一个长达数十年的模式,即私人和公共勾结,剥削城市居民。在弗林特,以黑人为主的人口被捆绑在废弃的房产中,并被排除在机会之外,这一过程被基安加-亚马哈塔·泰勒(Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor)称为“掠夺性包容”。在《逐利竞赛:银行和房地产行业如何破坏黑人住房所有权》一书中,她为有关房地产行业及其种族和阶级因素如何导致环境危机的必要对话提供了富有成效的补充。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Predatory Inclusion and the Flint Water Crisis
In 2014, residents of Flint, Michigan began to experience the first effects of the years-long Flint water crisis. Mismanagement of crumbling infrastructure by the city and state and severe austerity measures exposed thousands of children to toxic levels of lead in the drinking water. While blame for this is often assigned to the officials in charge at the time, the history of Flint reveals a decades-long pattern of private and public collusion in the exploitation of city residents. The predominantly Black population of Flint has been tethered to derelict properties and excluded from opportunity through a process that Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor has termed “predatory inclusion.” In Race for Profit: How Banks and the Real Estate Industry Undermined Black Homeownership, she provides a productive addition to the necessary conversations on how the real estate industry and its racial and class dimensions factor into the creation of environmental crises.
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