INTD1136A-W13
Urban Underclass/Public Policy
The Urban Underclass and Public Policy
Since the late 1980s, a general mood of urgency has swelled around the growing concentration and persistence of poverty in inner-city America. Scholars, policymakers, and practitioners on the front lines noted with alarm that many of the problems seen in distressed urban communities seemed virtually intractable and non-responsive to conventional policy and program approaches. This course will be a critical introduction to some of the most pressing and contentious issues concerning the nation’s inner-cities today: the nature, origins, and persistence of ghetto poverty; racial residential segregation and affordable public housing; social organization, civic life, and political participation; crime and incarceration rates and prisoner re-entry; marriage and family structure; adolescent street culture and its impact on social mobility; women and poverty. In this course, we will also examine the issues of labor force participation and economic dislocation; entrepreneurship and inner-city revitalization; and the seminar makes use of the critically-acclaimed HBO series, The Wire.
Since the late 1980s, a general mood of urgency has swelled around the growing concentration and persistence of poverty in inner-city America. Scholars, policymakers, and practitioners on the front lines noted with alarm that many of the problems seen in distressed urban communities seemed virtually intractable and non-responsive to conventional policy and program approaches. This course will be a critical introduction to some of the most pressing and contentious issues concerning the nation’s inner-cities today: the nature, origins, and persistence of ghetto poverty; racial residential segregation and affordable public housing; social organization, civic life, and political participation; crime and incarceration rates and prisoner re-entry; marriage and family structure; adolescent street culture and its impact on social mobility; women and poverty. In this course, we will also examine the issues of labor force participation and economic dislocation; entrepreneurship and inner-city revitalization; and the seminar makes use of the critically-acclaimed HBO series, The Wire.
- Term:
- Winter 2013
- Location:
- Warner Hall 506(WNS 506)
- Schedule:
- 10:15am-12:15pm on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday (Jan 7, 2013 to Feb 1, 2013)
- Type:
- Lecture
- Instructors:
- Keith Reeves
- Subject:
- Interdepartmental
- Department:
- Interdepartmental
- Division:
- Interdisciplinary
- Requirements Fulfilled:
- NOR SOC WTR
- Levels:
- Undergraduate
- Availability:
- View availability, prerequisites, and other requirements.
- Course Reference Number (CRN):
- 11424
- Subject Code:
- INTD
- Course Number:
- 1136
- Section Identifier:
- A