On Common Ground - International Perspectives on the Community Land Trust

Autores
John Emmeus Davis, Line Algoed, María E. Hernández-Torrales

Fifty years ago, African-American activists in Albany, Georgia extended their political fight for civil rights into the economic realm by creating New Communities Inc. They had come to believe that owning land was essential to securing greater independence for their people. But landownership was out-of-reach for most African-Americans in the Deep South of the 1960s and too easily lost if they did acquire a small farm, a plot of land, or a house in town. The visionary founders of New Communities concluded, therefore, that community ownership would be a more secure form of tenure. Community-owned land could be combined, moreover, with the individual ownership of newly built houses, offering low-income people an opportunity to become homeowners. Community-owned land could also provide a platform for the cooperative organization of various enterprises, offering low-income people a chance for economic prosperity.

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Anterior
Anterior

O Community Land Trust como instrumento de resistência aos projetos urbanos neoliberais

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Critical Care. Architecture and Urbanism for a Broken Planet