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Middle-Class Poverty Politics: Making Place, Making People

Author

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  • Sarah Elwood
  • Victoria Lawson
  • Samuel Nowak

Abstract

In a context of rising inequality and economic vulnerability in the United States, we explore links between class identities, urban place-making, and poverty politics. We ask how class difference and poverty politics are made and remade in neighborhood-level place-making and with what implications for boundaries and alliances between middle-class and poorer residents. Place-making refers to activities through which residents work to produce the neighborhood they want, such as participating in community organization or initiatives, interacting with their neighbors, and supporting or opposing particular changes in the neighborhood. We use a relational poverty framework to show that middle-class place-making reproduces normatively white middle-class place imaginaries but always also produces poverty and class politics. We extend prior research on middle-class poverty politics, which focuses primarily on class boundary making, to investigate whether progressive, alliance-building moments ever emerge. Drawing on case study research with two Seattle neighborhoods, we trace the ways in which place-making practices situate middle-class and poorer actors in relation to one another. We show that these interactions might continue to govern poverty and poorer people but might also challenge normative understandings of poverty and sow the seeds for cross-class alliances. Through comparative analysis of the neighborhoods as dense sites of class formation, we show how particular histories, place imaginaries, and built or institutional infrastructures allow (or foreclose) questioning and reworking of normative class and race formations and poverty politics to pave the way for cross-class alliance.

Suggested Citation

  • Sarah Elwood & Victoria Lawson & Samuel Nowak, 2015. "Middle-Class Poverty Politics: Making Place, Making People," Annals of the American Association of Geographers, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 105(1), pages 123-143, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:raagxx:v:105:y:2015:i:1:p:123-143
    DOI: 10.1080/00045608.2014.968945
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    Citations

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    Cited by:

    1. Sara Le Xuan, 2023. "The Power of Radical Place-Making Practices: Lessons Learned from ufaFabrik in Berlin," Land, MDPI, vol. 12(9), pages 1-18, August.
    2. Giada Casarin & Julie MacLeavy & David Manley, 2023. "Rethinking urban utopianism: The fallacy of social mix in the 15-minute city," Urban Studies, Urban Studies Journal Limited, vol. 60(16), pages 3167-3186, December.
    3. Poeti Nazura Gulfira Akbar & Jurian Edelenbos, 2020. "Social Impacts of Place-Making in Urban Informal Settlements: A Case Study of Indonesian Kampungs," Social Sciences, MDPI, vol. 9(6), pages 1-30, June.
    4. Alison L Bain, 2017. "Neighbourhood artistic disaffiliation in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada," Urban Studies, Urban Studies Journal Limited, vol. 54(13), pages 2935-2954, October.
    5. Victoria Lawson & Sarah Elwood & Santiago Canevaro & Nicolas Viotti, 2015. "“The poor are us†: middle-class poverty politics in Buenos Aires and Seattle," Environment and Planning A, , vol. 47(9), pages 1873-1891, September.
    6. Myungji Yang, 2018. "The rise of ‘Gangnam style’: Manufacturing the urban middle class in Seoul, 1976–1996," Urban Studies, Urban Studies Journal Limited, vol. 55(15), pages 3404-3420, November.
    7. Carrie Chennault & Laura Klavitter & Lynn Sutton, 2019. "Visceral Encounters: A Political Ecology of Urban Land, Food, and Housing in Dubuque, Iowa," Social Sciences, MDPI, vol. 8(4), pages 1-25, April.

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