Melissa J Hagan, Adrienne R Hall, Laura Mamo, Jackie Ramos, Leslie Dubbin
{"title":"家园:面对混合收入再开发的公屋居民的关心与抗拒。","authors":"Melissa J Hagan, Adrienne R Hall, Laura Mamo, Jackie Ramos, Leslie Dubbin","doi":"10.1037/ort0000452","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Low-income communities of color experience significant political, economic, and health inequities and, not unrelatedly, are disproportionately exposed to violent crime than are residents of higher income communities. In an effort to mitigate concentrations of poverty and crime, governmental agencies have partnered with affordable housing developers to redevelop public housing \"projects\" into mixed-income communities and to do so within a \"trauma-informed\" framework. The current study analyzes how residents have historically and contemporaneously negotiated, endured, and resisted structural and interpersonal violence in 2 long-standing, predominately African American, public housing communities undergoing a public-private housing redevelopment initiative. Interviews with 44 adult public housing residents (age range = 18-75 years; 82% African American/Black) were conducted during a 2-year period while residents' homes were being demolished and rebuilt into mixed-income communities. Analysis of in-depth interviews used constructivist grounded theory principles to reveal a common theme and basic social process of the ongoing formation of <i>homeplace,</i> with subthemes focusing on the ways homeplace emerges through shared lineage, knowing and caring practices; how homeplace is maintained through networks of protection in unsafe contexts; how homeplace is disrupted as a result of redevelopment activities; and the reclamation of homeplace during redevelopment in the service of hope and healing. These findings offer a nuanced view of resident's lived experiences of place-based trauma and collective resistance and resilience, while also highlighting the place-specific ways in which redevelopment unsettles deeply rooted sociocultural configurations of home and community. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).</p>","PeriodicalId":409666,"journal":{"name":"The American journal of orthopsychiatry","volume":" ","pages":"523-534"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2020-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"4","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Homeplace: Care and resistance among public housing residents facing mixed-income redevelopment.\",\"authors\":\"Melissa J Hagan, Adrienne R Hall, Laura Mamo, Jackie Ramos, Leslie Dubbin\",\"doi\":\"10.1037/ort0000452\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>Low-income communities of color experience significant political, economic, and health inequities and, not unrelatedly, are disproportionately exposed to violent crime than are residents of higher income communities. In an effort to mitigate concentrations of poverty and crime, governmental agencies have partnered with affordable housing developers to redevelop public housing \\\"projects\\\" into mixed-income communities and to do so within a \\\"trauma-informed\\\" framework. The current study analyzes how residents have historically and contemporaneously negotiated, endured, and resisted structural and interpersonal violence in 2 long-standing, predominately African American, public housing communities undergoing a public-private housing redevelopment initiative. Interviews with 44 adult public housing residents (age range = 18-75 years; 82% African American/Black) were conducted during a 2-year period while residents' homes were being demolished and rebuilt into mixed-income communities. Analysis of in-depth interviews used constructivist grounded theory principles to reveal a common theme and basic social process of the ongoing formation of <i>homeplace,</i> with subthemes focusing on the ways homeplace emerges through shared lineage, knowing and caring practices; how homeplace is maintained through networks of protection in unsafe contexts; how homeplace is disrupted as a result of redevelopment activities; and the reclamation of homeplace during redevelopment in the service of hope and healing. These findings offer a nuanced view of resident's lived experiences of place-based trauma and collective resistance and resilience, while also highlighting the place-specific ways in which redevelopment unsettles deeply rooted sociocultural configurations of home and community. 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引用次数: 4
摘要
有色人种的低收入社区经历了严重的政治、经济和健康不平等,与高收入社区的居民相比,他们更容易遭受暴力犯罪,这并非无关。为了减轻贫困和犯罪的集中,政府机构与经济适用房开发商合作,将公共住房“项目”重新开发成混合收入社区,并在“了解创伤”的框架内进行。当前的研究分析了在两个长期存在的,主要是非裔美国人的公共住房社区中,居民如何在历史上和当代协商,忍受和抵制结构和人际暴力,这些社区正在进行公私住房重建计划。访问44名成年公屋居民(年龄介乎18至75岁);82%的非裔美国人/黑人)在两年的时间内进行,同时居民的房屋被拆除并重建为混合收入社区。运用建构主义扎根理论原理对深度访谈进行分析,揭示家园形成的共同主题和基本社会过程,子主题关注家园通过共同的血统、认识和关怀实践而产生的方式;如何在不安全环境中通过保护网络维持家园;家园如何因重建活动而受到干扰;以及在重建过程中对家园的开垦,为希望和治愈服务。这些研究结果提供了一个细致入微的视角,反映了居民的生活经历,即基于地点的创伤、集体抵抗和恢复力,同时也强调了重建扰乱家庭和社区根深蒂固的社会文化配置的特定地点方式。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA,版权所有)。
Homeplace: Care and resistance among public housing residents facing mixed-income redevelopment.
Low-income communities of color experience significant political, economic, and health inequities and, not unrelatedly, are disproportionately exposed to violent crime than are residents of higher income communities. In an effort to mitigate concentrations of poverty and crime, governmental agencies have partnered with affordable housing developers to redevelop public housing "projects" into mixed-income communities and to do so within a "trauma-informed" framework. The current study analyzes how residents have historically and contemporaneously negotiated, endured, and resisted structural and interpersonal violence in 2 long-standing, predominately African American, public housing communities undergoing a public-private housing redevelopment initiative. Interviews with 44 adult public housing residents (age range = 18-75 years; 82% African American/Black) were conducted during a 2-year period while residents' homes were being demolished and rebuilt into mixed-income communities. Analysis of in-depth interviews used constructivist grounded theory principles to reveal a common theme and basic social process of the ongoing formation of homeplace, with subthemes focusing on the ways homeplace emerges through shared lineage, knowing and caring practices; how homeplace is maintained through networks of protection in unsafe contexts; how homeplace is disrupted as a result of redevelopment activities; and the reclamation of homeplace during redevelopment in the service of hope and healing. These findings offer a nuanced view of resident's lived experiences of place-based trauma and collective resistance and resilience, while also highlighting the place-specific ways in which redevelopment unsettles deeply rooted sociocultural configurations of home and community. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).