Content area

Abstract

This article examines the gentrification of Fort Greene, which is located in the western part of black Brooklyn, one of the largest contiguous black urban areas in the USA. Between the late 1960s and 2003, gentrification in Fort Greene followed the patterns discovered by scholars of black neighborhoods; the gentrifying agents were almost exclusively black and gentrification as a process was largely bottom-up because entities interested in the production of space were mostly not involved. Since 2003, this has changed. Whites have been moving to Fort Greene in large numbers and will soon represent the numerical majority. Public and private interventions in and around Fort Greene have created a new top-down version of gentrification, which is facilitating this white influx. Existing black residential and commercial tenants are replaced and displaced in the name of urban economic development.

Details

Title
African Americans, Gentrification, and Neoliberal Urbanization: the Case of Fort Greene, Brooklyn
Author
Chronopoulos, Themis 1 

 Swansea University, Swansea, Wales, UK 
Pages
294-322
Publication year
2016
Publication date
Dec 2016
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
15591646
e-ISSN
19364741
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1929870182
Copyright
Journal of African American Studies is a copyright of Springer, 2016.