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Beyond the poverty paradigm: The neoliberal city and the low-income worker. The buffalo, New York experience

Voices of Globalization

ISBN: 978-1-78190-545-6, eISBN: 978-1-78190-546-3

Publication date: 15 October 2013

Abstract

This research note focuses on the quest to move beyond the poverty paradigm in researching, planning, and developing distressed urban neighborhoods. It is based on the notion that the poverty paradigm hides more than it reveals about the positionality of people in neoliberal society. It argues that low incomes and joblessness are structural components of neoliberal economies. Therefore, they cannot be eliminated without making fundamental changes in the way that neoliberalism operates. Thus, in a neoliberal society, with a small, passive government, both low incomes and joblessness will grow over time, especially among blacks, Latinos, and immigrants of color. Within this context, the distress found in inner-city neighborhoods is a product of failed urban institutions and the lack of investments in such places. However, there are no laws of socioeconomic development that say low income and joblessness must equate with living in distressed neighborhoods, where dilapidation, crime, and violence are characteristic features of the landscape. This reality is a public policy decision. Therefore, it can be changed by altering the investment strategy in distressed community and by radically transforming the institutions operating in these communities. If this happens, it will be possible to produce communities where low-income workers live in energetic places where they enjoy a high quality of life and standard of living. In such regenerated neighborhoods, it will also be possible to develop innovative strategies that put the jobless to work.

Citation

Taylor, H.L., McGlynn, L. and Luter, D.G. (2013), "Beyond the poverty paradigm: The neoliberal city and the low-income worker. The buffalo, New York experience", Voices of Globalization (Research in Political Sociology, Vol. 21), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 161-180. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0895-9935(2013)0000021011

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2013 Emerald Group Publishing Limited