Choose two of this week’s readings that you think are in conversation with one another and discuss why they are either complementary or at odds with one another. What do their perspectives reveal about the particular ways that race and racism shapes US urban areas? 4
Chapter 1
rewards. It allows a president to state things such as, “I strongly support
diversity of all kinds, including racial diversity in higher education,” yet,
at the same time, to characterize the University of Michigan’s affirmation
action program as “flawed” and “discriminatory” against whites.23 Thus
whites enunciate positions that safeguard their racial interests without
sounding “racist.” Shielded by color blindness, whites can express resent
ment toward minorities; criticize their morality, values, and work ethic;
and even claim to be the victims of “reverse racism.” This is the thesis I
will defend in this book to explain the curious enigma of “racism without
racists.”24
WHITES’ RACIAL ATTITUDES IN THE
POST-CIVIL RIGHTS ERA
Since the late 1950s surveys on racial attitudes have consistently found
that fewer whites subscribe to the views associated with Jim Crow. For
example, whereas the majority of whites supported segregated neighbor
hoods, schools, transportation, jobs, and public accommodations in the
1940s, less than a quarter indicated they did in the 1970s.25 Similarly,
fewer whites than ever now seem to subscribe to stereotypical views of
blacks. Although the number is still high (ranging from 20 percent to 50
percent, depending on the stereotype), the proportion of whites who state
� in surveys that blacks are lazy, stupid, irresponsible, and violent has
declined since the 1940s.26
These changes in whites’ racial attitudes have been explained by the
survey community and commentators in four ways. First, are they racial
optimists. This group of analysts agrees with whites’ common sense on
racial matters and believes the changes symbolize a profound transition
in the United States. Early representatives of this view were Herbert
Hyman and Paul B. Sheatsley, who wrote widely influential articles on
the subject in Scientific American. In a reprint of their earlier work in the
influential collection edited by Talcott Parsons and Kenneth Clark, The
Negro American, Sheatsley rated the changes in white attitudes as “revolu
tionary” and concluded,
The mass of white Americans have shown in many ways that they will not
follow a racist government and that they will not follow racist leaders.
Rather, they are engaged in the painful task of adjusting to an integrated
society. It will not be easy for most, but one cannot at this late date doubt
the basic commitment. In their hearts they know that the American Negro is
right.27
8
Chapter 1
latent in the way many express their racial views). Instead, it is based on
a materialist interpretation of racial matters and thus sees the views of
actors as corresponding to their systemic location. Those at the bottom of
the racial barrel tend to hold oppositional views and those who receive
the manifold wages of whiteness tend to hold views in support of the
racial status quo. Whether actors express “resentment” or “hostility”
toward minorities is largely irrelevant for the maintenance of white privi
lege. As David Wellman points out in his Portraits of White Racism, “[p]rej
udiced people are not the only racists in America.”49
KEY TERMS: RACE, RACIAL STRUCTURE,
AND RACIAL IDEOLOGY
One reason why, in general terms, whites and people of color cannot
agree on racial matters is because they conceive terms such as “racism”
very differently. Whereas for most whites racism is prejudice, for most
people of color racism is systemic or institutionalized. Although this is
not a theory book, my examination of color-blind racism has etched in it
the indelible ink of a “regime of truth” 50 about how the world is orga
nized. Thus, rather than hiding my theoretical assumptions, I state them
openly for the benefit of readers and potential critics.
The first key term is the notion of race. There is very little formal dis
agreement among social scientists in accepting the idea that race is a
socially constructed category. 51 This means that notions of racial differ
ence are human creations rather than eternal, essential categories. As
such, racial categories have a history and are subject to change. And here
ends the agreement among social scientists on this matter. There are at
least three distinct variations on how social scientists approach this con
structionist perspective on race. The first approach, which is gaining pop
ularity among white social scientists, is the idea that because race is
socially constructed, it is not a fundamental category of analysis and
praxis. Some analysts go as far as to suggest that because race is a con
structed category, then it is not real and social scientists who use the cate
gory are the ones who make it real.52
The second approach, typical of most sociological writing on race, gives
lip service to the social constructionist view-usually a line in the begin
ning of the article or book. Writers in this group then proceed to discuss
“racial” differences in academic achievement, crime, and SAT scores as if
they were truly racial.53 This is the central way in which contemporary
scholars contribute to the propagation of racist interpretations of racial
inequality. By failing to highlight the social dynamics that produce these
racial differences, these scholars help reinforce the racial order. 54
10
Chapter 1
ideological rule is always partial. Even in periods of hegemonic rule,60
such as the current one, subordinate racial groups develop oppositional
views. However, it would be foolish to believe that those who rule a soci
ety do not have the power to at least color (pun intended) the views of
the ruled.
Racial ideology can be conceived for analytical purposes as comprising
the following elements: common frames, style, and racial stories (details
on each can be found in chapters 2, 3, and 4). The frames that bond
together a particular racial ideology are rooted in the group-based condi
tions and experiences of the races and are, at the symbolic level, the repre
sentations developed by these groups to explain how the world is or
ought to be. And because the group life of the various racially defined
groups is based on hierarchy and domination, the ruling ideology
expresses as “common sense” the interests of the dominant race, while
oppositional ideologies attempt to challenge that common sense by pro
viding alternative frames, ideas, and stories based on the experiences of
subordinated races.
Individual actors employ these elements as “building blocks . . . for
manufacturing versions on actions, self, and social structures” in commu
nicative situations.61 The looseness of the elements allows users to maneu
ver within various contexts (e.g., responding to a race-related survey,
discussing racial issues with family, or arguing about affirmative action
in a college classroom) and produce various accounts and presentations
of self (e.g., appearing ambivalent, tolerant, or strong minded). This loose
character enhances the legitimating role of racial ideology because it
allows for accommodation of contradictions, exceptions, and new infor
mation. As Jackman points out about ideology in general: “Indeed, the
strength of an ideology lies in its loose-jointed, flexible application. An
ideology is a political instrument, not an exercise in personal logic: consistency
is rigidity, the only pragmatic effect of which is to box oneself in.” 62
Before I can proceed, two important caveats should be offered. First,
although whites, because of their privileged position in the racial order,
form a social group (the dominant race), they are fractured along class,
gender, sexual orientation, and other forms of “social cleavage.” Hence,
they have multiple and often contradictory interests that are not easy to
disentangle and that predict a priori their mobilizing capacity (Do white
workers have more in common with white capitalists than with black
workers?). However, because all actors awarded the dominant racial posi
tion, regardless of their multiple structural locations (men or women, gay
or straight, working class or bourgeois) benefit from what Mills calls the
“racial contract,” 63 most have historically endorsed the ideas that justify
the racial status quo.
Second, although not every single member of the dominant race
NYU Press
Chapter Title: Introduction
Chapter Author(s): David R. Diaz and Rodolfo D. Torres
Book Title: Latino Urbanism
Book Subtitle: The Politics of Planning, Policy and Redevelopment
Book Editor(s): David R. Diaz, Rodolfo D. Torres
Published by: NYU Press. (2012)
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt9qg0h1.4
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Urbanism
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Introduction
David R. Diaz and Rodolfo D. Torres
CHAPTER ONE
The last three decades of the twentieth century marked the beginning of
epochal socioeconomic transformation of U.S. society. The economic reverberations of these changes have continued through the first decade of
the twenty-first century as the income and wealth gap continues to widen. Nowhere is this more obvious than in U.S. cities and surrounding metropolitan areas, where the damaging effects of the deep recession on the
living standards of working-class, lower-class, and middle-class American
workers and their families are felt the most.
In addition to macroeconomic trends, immigration and population
shifts have had a tremendous economic impact on U.S. cities. Recent protests in major cities across the United States against several proposed
changes in U.S. immigration policy and citizenship status have once again
brought attention to big cities, where much of the precipitous growth of
immigrant populations has occurred.
According to the U.S. Census Bureau (2011), as of April 1, 2010, an estimated 50.5 million Latinos lived in the United States, making people of
“Latino origin” the nation’s largest ethnic minority group. Latinos constituted 16.3 percent of the nation’s total population of nearly 308.7 million. It
was projected that this population would grow to nearly 132.8 million by
July 1, 2050, and that Latino men, women, and children would then constitute 30 percent of the nation’s population. The Mexican American population constituted 63 percent of the nation’s current 50.5 million Latinos,
with Puerto Ricans another 9.2 percent, Cubans 3.5 percent, and Salvadorans 3.2 percent. The remainder were of some other Central American,
South American, or other Hispanic or Latino origin.
William H. Frey (2001), in a recent publication of the Brookings Institute, asserts that over half of America’s cities are now majority nonwhite.
Primary cities in fifty-eight metropolitan areas were “majority minority”
in 2010, up from forty-three in 2000. Cities lost only about half as many
whites in the 2000s as in the 1990s, but “black flight” from cities such as
Atlanta, Chicago, Dallas, and Detroit accelerated in the 2000s.
Frey also reports that ethnic minorities represent 35 percent of suburban residents, a proportion similar to their share of the overall U.S. population. Among the hundred largest metro areas, thirty-six feature “melting
1
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2
Introduction
pot” suburbs where at least 35 percent of residents are nonwhite. The suburbs of Houston, Las Vegas, San Francisco, and Washington, D.C., became
majority minority in the 2000s.
More important than the sheer numbers is the fact that Latina/o men
and women and their families are a growing sector of the U.S. working
class and a fragile first-generation middle class. Equally significant, they
are increasingly concentrated in the very industries that have been most
influenced by the economic restructuring of the United States. They are
trapped in low-wage jobs in an economy that is producing far too few living-wage jobs to accommodate the increasing number of workers entering the labor market and to sustain a robust and democratic economy.
Principles of critical urbanism will guide the reader through this volume, which examines Latinos within the context of the changing role of
cities in a market-driven and racialized environment. A growing portion
of the world’s population lives and works in cities, thus the knowledge of
how cities develop and function is a critical component of a planner’s intellectual tool kit. Applying an understanding of the effects of socioeconomic change on cities to other major areas of urban theory will enhance
planners’ ability to develop appropriate policy measures. In addition, the
dramatic social changes that are reshaping the terrain of planning politics
are predominantly an urban phenomena. The characteristics of contemporary cities—increasing diversity, globalization of production and consumption, new sources of inequality, and uneven development—are creating different terrains for the policy actions that are the primary focus of
the urban studies under late capitalism.
The contributors to this book represent a diverse group of scholars
attempting to link their own unique theoretical interpretations and approaches to political and policy interventions in the spaces and cultures
of Latino everyday life. It matters how cities are theorized, as this underpins the ideological and political designs and the policy frameworks adopted. Given the gaps between explanatory and normative concepts underlying urban planning and the radical changes in the United States, as
well as globally, regarding economies, political systems, and information
technologies, many subject areas must be considered experimentally.
On a range of levels, urban environmental crises are traceable to racism and market-driven forces. But the approach called New Urbanism
or Smart Growth, which claims to address the latest iteration of urban
crisis, fails to adequately analyze and address these factors. When Bullard, Johnson, and Torres (2000) denounced planning’s main production
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3
Introduction
in the modern era, sprawl, as “stupid growth,” they implicitly exposed
the profession’s dubious history of complicity in creating a failed suburbia (Diaz 2005). The current race to envelop planning practice in a
new ideology is a shallow and intellectually dishonest evasion of the
task of thoroughly and painfully acknowledging planning’s institutional
and intellectual failure. Eurocentrists, who continue to control the educational and administrative functions of planning, are reluctant to give
credit where credit is due, especially in the necessary discourse over
why the suburban model and the programs promising federally funded
revitalization in the post–World War II era have been characterized by
systemic irrationalities with regard to planning, public policy, and the
environment.
The class and racial hierarchy that persists in the planning profession is
not “new,” nor will the construction of a “new” ideology undo a history of
failed urban policy. On a multitude of levels, uncritically adopted rationalfunctional principles have been reified by an elitist, Eurocentric planning
profession that has proven resistant to critique from ethnic communities
(Taylor 1998). Innumerable planning graduate programs maintain only
token minority representation, with the University of California system
being among the worst. One of the editors of this volume is one such token faculty member in a planning department. Power in the profession,
whether in the public or the private sector, remains concentrated among
a cloistered Euro-American elite. Yet when this system of dominance is
challenged, the tried-and-true class-based defense emerges, asserting
technical knowledge, professional experience, managerial proficiency, bureaucratic power relations, and/or privileged educational attainment over
public ignorance.
The structural economic, psychological, and environmental crises of
suburbia that now confront planning were created and defended by this
very hierarchy (Beatley 2000; Deleage 1994; Barry 2005; Booth 2004). Current planning discourse, despite its claims to novelty, is still rife with contradictions and irrationalities that are evidence of the fundamental failure of Eurocentric control over planning education and practice for over
two generations. Thus, any claim to enlightened discourse will be initiated
only by addressing who was (and is) most responsible for the failures of
planning into the current era. This analysis, which must incorporate the
voices of excluded ethnic others, will necessarily confront a legacy of racism in planning on multiple levels: in planning education, in the training
of students, in private and public sector practice, and in the blatant ma-
4
Introduction
nipulation of redistributive federal programs and planning ideology. Only
then will planning create the potential space for meaningful transformations and potentially egalitarian transitions in both practice and urban
social change. Specifically, this historical and critical approach is a necessary initial stage for restructuring an urban planning strategy that is based
on barrio urbanism and that includes and engages Latina/o community
leaders. Latino scholarship on the urban condition must also be included:
for example, the urban writings of Ernesto Galarza, a progressive public intellectual and prominent in Mexican American community activist
whose wide-ranging and groundbreaking work in urban politics and human geography has been largely neglected by the planning community as
well as by urban scholars.
Situating “El Barrio” in Planning Discourse:
Lessons from the Front Line
Though barrios were historically created and maintained by segregation
and discrimination, their everyday life has kept a vitality and sense of
place that validate the importance of the urban in the midst of the logic
of decentralized sprawl that permeates planning. The power of Latina/o
culture is a fundamental characteristic of barrio urbanism, a symbolic resistance to racism and a celebration of culturally situated social practices.
Interwoven into this urban milieu is an internally defended concept of
the importance of the social, testifying that the significance of what Alain
Touraine (1988) described as “the social actor” persists, despite its loss in
academic discourse in the rush to a postmodern explanation for all things
urban. Without the reconstruction of the art of the social that barrio communities vividly exemplify, sustainable urbanism is unlikely to succeed in
this consumption-obsessed society.
The concept of the ciudadano, the citizen situated in everyday life and
urban culture, is linked to the most mundane and fundamental act, the
act of walking. Walking makes possible the evolution of a cultural community over time through shared experiences on the human scale of relationships. Visually, walking in the neighborhood lends itself to an appreciation
of jardines, color, calles, árboles, tiendas, arte publico, y la vida de la calle.
Culturally, it has offered a historic respite from a repressive, discriminatory society that has traditionally marginalized everyday life as much as ethnic difference. The art of traversing through a neighborhood, both practical and pleasurable, is part of an aesthetic that planning has only recently
and lamely attempted to reclaim.
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5
Introduction
Historically, environmental sustainability is fundamental to spatial
relations within el barrio. The defense and utilization of la tierra for food
production in collective gardens and farms, watershed management,
communal celebrations, and the protection of nature have all been normative in the barrio; these practices predate European immigration to the
Western Hemisphere. Other essential features of barrio life, such as mixed
use, reliance on public transportation, recycling and adaptive reuse, collective sharing of space, and eclectic reproduction of the urban landscape
through public art, have only recently been rediscovered as important reforms to past planning practice.
Because of discriminatory redistribution of public funds, barrios have
received little in the way of formally recognized public spaces such as
parks and recreational facilities, but they have developed numerous ways
of maximizing the utilization of space for the community and particularly
for children. La tierra es par los niños, even when the spaces available are
merely neighbors’ side or front yards, streets, and vacant lots. Even private spaces may be turned into civic resources and made inviting (Gámez
2002; Rojas 1999). Most barrio residents would be amused to learn that in
trendy architectural discourse front porches are a “must amenity.”
Further, everyday life in barrios has always involved recycling. Responding to economic marginalization and necessity, barrio residents have actively recycled a wide range of materials (Peña 2005). Ropa, madera, pipas,
ventanas, puertas, ladrillos, y tinas have been adaptively reused for personal use, landscape design, structures, and/or art. In fact, no other social
sector has been more directly engaged in active recycling throughout the
twentieth century than barrio residents.
For centuries barrio residents have also produced food, as a leisure
activity and to supplement household nutrition. Particularly in the past
quarter century, a vibrant jardinero movement has turned numerous vacant lots to productive use. Una explosion de verde, yerbas, floras, verduras
y fruta has resulted from intensive labor that beautifies the city and offers
nontoxic food resources for local and regional residents (Pinderhughes
2004).
El barrio thus has important contributions to make to the sustainable
urban policy that will be needed in the future: not only in relation to efficient energy use, maximization of existing resources, support for collective public amenities, urban density, adaptive reuse, and eclectic uses
of space, but in the role of the ciudadano, which exemplifies the vibrant
social agency within urbanism that planners of virtually all ideologies
6
Introduction
hope to restore (Katz 1994; Fung 2001; Calthorpe 1993; Bailly et al. 2000).
Arguments to reconceptualize urban design, create open space in neighborhoods, revert to mixed uses, and abandon rational functional zoning
logic are all predicated on the vision that Alain Touraine has articulated:
“Political and social institutions can no longer be the servants of a supposedly rational order or a progress that is supposedly inscribed in the laws of
historical evolution; they must be made to serve the Subject . . . to defend
the radiant future from the past” (2000, 303). Henri Lefebvre’s ([1974] 1991)
demand that urbanism challenge the gentrification that has displaced the
working class from the center of the city must also be met if this vision is
to be fulfilled; the defense of barrio space is thus critical to the project of
urban restoration.
Yet planners seeking solutions to the urban crisis have been unaware
of the barrio’s living demonstration of a rational, economically and environmentally sustainable form of urbanism in their midst. One reason for
their ignorance may well be the history of pathetic Eurocentric fear of the
other (Doob 1999; Bowser and Hunt 1996). El barrio has been stereotyped
as a mysterious, dangerous, and threatening space. Unwarranted assumptions about barrio life are reinforced by racist ideology and skew perceptions: thus, for example, el ciudadano caminando por la calle is viewed as
a frightening figure to be surveiled and controlled rather than a citizen interacting socially with his community. Everyday cultural practices are perceived as sinister resistance to mainstream society, and a suburban mindset imagines cities as zones of crime and degeneracy. Cloaked in mystery,
barrio culture has been ignored and misunderstood.
Planners have also had little awareness of the rich and eclectic history
of Latino urbanism. Along with the initial settlements of First Nations,
barrios and colonias have been some of the earliest urban forms in the
Southwest, dating from the 1600s. In fact, until the era of railroad expansion, barrios were the only urban centers. The influx of Euro-Americans
into the Southwest in the latter stages of the nineteenth century ushered
in a fundamental ethnic transition (Rosenbaum 1981), that has been reversed only in the last two decades. The evolution of cities is directly correlated with the growth of barrios and colonias. The three largest Latina/o
urban communities in the United States are in El Paso, San Antonio, and
Los Angeles.
In the past twenty-five years, barrio communities of the Southwest
have significantly expanded their territory and are on the verge of achieving an ethnic reconquista (Diaz 2005; Suro and Singer 2002). The most sub-
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7
Introduction
stantial Latina/o community in the country, East Los Angeles (Valle and
Torres 2000; Romo 1983; Acuña 1988), has expanded into what is now considered “the Greater Eastside.” This is a zone of approximately 450 square
miles, stretching east of the Los Angeles River into the central San Gabriel
Valley and south from Highland Park into the small cities that constitute
Southeast Los Angeles County. This ethnic and cultural transformation is
the most fundamental aspect of urban change associated with virtually
every city in the Southwest and, increasingly, cities throughout the nation.
Barrios are rapidly making inroads into surrounding urban communities and working-class suburbs and in some areas are taking over entire
counties. Los Angeles County is now 50 percent Latina/o and is largely a
system of barrios showing the polynucleated pattern of growth that Mark
Gottdiener, in an enlightened theoretical analysis, projected for suburbs in
this region in 1985.
Latinas/os have had a history throughout the last century of challenging planning and spatial relations. It has spanned land grant battles in
New Mexico from the 1880s through the 1960s (Peña 2005; Rosenbaum
1981); rent strikes in Spanish Harlem in the 1940s (Cayo-Sexton 1965);
and numerous struggles, over the decades, to save Chicano neighborhoods from urban renewal, whether Chavez Ravine in Los Angeles in the
1940s and 1950s (Lopez 2002; Parson 2005), Varrio Viejo in Tucson in the
1960s (Dimas 1999), or Chicano Park in Logan Heights, San Diego, in the
1960s and 1970s (Cockcroft and Barnet-Sanchez [1990] 1993). The Crusade for Justice in Denver, one of the first organizations of the Chicano
Power Movement, evolved from a critique of that city’s racist redevelopment and redistributive policies (Vigil 1999). Throughout the Southwest,
barrio social movements like La Raza Unida in the 1960s engaged cities
over their failure to provide the most basic urban amenities, such as sewer
and water systems, storm drains, paved streets, and recreational facilities
for youth (Vigil 1999). One of the first Chicano protest movements in California was a result of the dismantling of the entire western sector of Barrio Logan by California’s state transportation agency; by claiming land for
a community park where Chicano artists painted murals that portrayed
Chicano politics and history, the protesters gave cultural workers a unique
interventionist role in redefining space in a distinct culture image. Since
the 1970s, the Chicano environmental justice movement has attempted to
halt the environmental poisoning of working class Latino communities.
Oppositional movements have been barrio leaders’ only recourse, due
to the fact that Latinos both in and on the periphery of planning have had
8
Introduction
limited agency in advancing the promise of Model Cities, advocacy planning, and working-class community revitalization. These social actors,
marginalized by the profession, have had few avenues available to proactively shape policy. Yet in any project of barrio revitalization, those most
at risk should have the most influence over matters that will be affecting
their everyday lives. Self-determination, direct control over actions that
have potentially have long-term or even permanent impacts on individuals, families, and communities, is a fundamental human right.
The legacy of planning documents the opposite. Barrio residents have
sensed that they are under attack by urban policy mandates that they
have had no political influence to challenge (Acuña 1988). From the beginning of eminent domain in the post-World War II era of redevelopment
and transportation route designations, the state has viewed barrio space
as vulnerable and expendable. The destruction of barrios, involving the
demolition of massive amounts of affordable housing, the dismantling
of zones of minority property ownership, and radical reconfigurations of
space, has been carried out with a dismissal of minority concerns that
expressed a racist contempt for marginalized communities. In the aftermath of the enlightened federally financed War on Poverty, only minimal
influence has been ceded to representatives from disenfranchised zones
of the city. Since that era, as documented in this volume, the relationship
between a Euro-American planning profession and Latinas/os has been
oppositional and conflictive rather than egalitarian and inclusionary. But
through a long history of being marginalized economically and politically,
Latina/o communities have asserted their right to active participation in
land use decisions (Darder and Torres 2004).
Planning Literature and Barrio Reality
Despite the many lessons that planners might draw from the long history
of Latino urbanism, mainstream literature has rarely situated Latinas/
os in the center of urban crises or in relation to oppositional movements
critical of urban revitalization policy (Valle and Torres 2000; Peña 2005;
Diaz 2005). Latina/o environmentalists, including Devon Peña, Benjamin
Marquez, and Laura Pulido, as well as critical theorists Rodolfo Torres and
Nestor Rodriguez, have developed the most important urbanist analyses
of barrios and planning. Mike Davis is one of the very few non-Latino urbanists who has written on urban policy and Latinas/os with analytical
specificity and incisive social critique. His book Magical Urbanism (2000)
contains a wealth of information and is a major contribution to under-
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9
Introduction
standing the emerging Chicano and Latino urban landscape in the United
States.
Why has this failure to incorporate Latinas/os into planning literature
persisted into the twenty-first century? Given that they constitute a significant ethnic community and that barrios are a fundamental component
of every major city in the Southwest and other powerful cities across the
country, why have planners remained so ignorant of them and so narrowly focused on the “lily white” suburbs nurtured by the profession since the
post–World War II suburban expansion? To answer this question, a few
key aspects of city planning—racism, classism, and endorsement of discriminatory exclusion in public policy—will be briefly explored.
Planners’ failure to acknowledge, much less learn from, ethnic others in
the domains of theory, policy formulation, and practice is reflective of an
earlier era of segregation, a construct designed to nurture, celebrate, and
defend white privilege (Almaguer 1994; Doob 1999; Bowser and Hunt 1996;
Young 1990). A predominantly Euro-American discipline, in its staunch
resistance to incorporating other, existing visions of urban spatical relations, continues to practice, on an intellectual level, the kind of segregation more broadly and thoroughly enforced in an earlier period of U.S. history.
Planning has long resisted acknowledging its history of racism in education, practice, and policy (Darder 1995; Hoch 1994). From its earliest
inception in the modern era (since 1950), planning has actively resisted
minority voices concerning urban policy. The result was a series of historical contradictions to any claims of a pluralist democracy in urban policy
through the late 1980s. Planning remained one of the most segregated
professions well into the 1980s. Planning schools practiced a de facto “color line” in annual admissions. University of California Berkeley (where one
of the authors attended) was, and is, notorious for the paltry numbers of
Latina/o graduate students admitted through the 1990s, though California
has by far the highest percentage of Latinas/os in the nation. In addition,
the scarcity of Latina/o doctoral students in planning is nothing less than
a social crime, given the importance of urban policy and planning to the
future of barrio revitalization.
Structural racism resulted in a distinctly racist social and professional environment for Latina/o planners through the 1980s (one that many
would argue still exists today). Yet the 1980s was the critical period of
federally supported revitalization programs. In the era when redistributive benefits should have substantially enhanced barrios, minorities were
10
Introduction
forced into marginalized roles with virtually no power. Those that resisted
were professionally repressed or blacklisted from the city planning profession.
Obviously, this had severe, detrimental impacts on barrio redevelopment and reconstruction. In fact, few attempt to claim that any meaningful level of tangible benefit actually accrued to barrios during this era.
Racism and resistance to ethnic difference were key factors necessitating
the evolution, in numerous cities, of barrio social movements engaging in
desperate luchas for the very survival of barrios. Barrio leaders, instead of
participating in principled inclusionary, egalitarian planning, were forced
into confrontational roles in defense of barrio spatial relations and Latinas/os in cities.
Classism and sexism were also prominent forces in city planning
practice through the early 1980s. City bureaucracies, like colleges, were
reluctant to admit women and minorities into their ranks (Hoch 1994).
For minorities in general and Latinas in particular, seeking a professional
degree and a career in planning was a highly risky venture. Situated in an
economy that supported systemic exclusion (Doob 1999), city planners often acted in defense of class privilege. Consequently barrio constituencies
came into conflict with planners and criticized a range of failures in urban
policy (Feagin 1989; Rodriguez 1993; Davis 2000; Diaz 2005).
The key goal of the profession was legitimation of elite interests rather
than actual revitalization of deteriorating neighborhoods. A sequestered
profession made up of Euro-American men developed a siege mentality
in relation to the universe outside the “gates of city hall.” They normatively
rejected oppositional voices, less on the basis of the merits of proposals
than on the basis of maintaining their own total control over planning
knowledge and urban policy (Taylor 1998). Thus they kept barrio residents
from establishing proactive, community-based alternatives to rationalfunctional planning practice.
The political exclusion maintained during the critical early stages of
Model Cities was and remains a central cause of the current crisis in planning. As we enter the fifth decade of predominantly Eurocentric control
over the policy apparatus of the state, the only historical lesson is that of
stark failure to assist, much less actually revitalize, barrios, almost anywhere. The demise of advocacy planning, the only true reform movement
within planning, doomed the profession to a series of conflicts with barrios in which aggressive protests were the sole avenue for Latinos’ political
expression and critique of planners’ constant policy ineptitude.
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11
Introduction
Thus, it is no surprise that by the late twentieth century the topic of
Latinas/os’ relationship to space had yet to assume a central place in
planning discourse. The sole arena was environmental justice. In a famous
1989 Amicus journal article (Russell 1989), planners “proudly” pronounced
the “discovery” of environmental racism. But while addressing racism in
any of its forms is important, claiming a “new” racism in the late twentieth
century shows either lamentable ignorance or a hypocritical cover-up of
the long-standing history of environmental insults to Latino communities
and the vibrant social justice movements that arose as early as the 1940s
and 1950s to address these problems.
Racism in planning practice has correlated directly with an exclusion
from planning literature of studies focused on urban policy’s effects on
barrios. For decades, the existence of any semblance of such a literature
was due mainly to Chicana/o sociologists and historians who ethically
could not escape documenting the urban planning injustices perpetrated
on barrios as a subset of other narratives. A few ethnic historians, Rodolfo
Acuña being the most prominent, have analyzed the Latina/o urban experience far more significantly than planners have (though Acuña’s most
significant contribution, A Community under Siege: A Chronicle of Chicanos East of the Los Angeles River [1984], has been largely ignored by both
Chicano and non-Chicano urbanists). Eminent domain, freeway destruction, land banking, targeted disinvestment, racism in public policy, and
the devastation of Latina/o spaces were readily apparent to this field of
academia. Further, literature from the fields of public health, education,
social welfare, and law has at least occasionally touched on planning in
descriptions of such issues as poverty, inadequate housing, and lack of infrastructure in Latino communities. Yet in planning, similar documentation was virtually absent well into the 1990s.
Finally, one of the most fundamental failures in the literature has been
the inability to recognize how barrios are in the vanguard of sustainable
urbanism. It is the height of Eurocentric arrogance to declare a New Urbanism when every feature of that framework has long been and continues to be exhibited as a vibrant and enduring reality in barrios through
the country. Devon Peña and Raquel Rivera-Pinderhughes are among
the leading voices addressing barrios’ traditions of sustainable urbanism
and local economic relations. And in the past decade, as mentioned earlier, Latina/o urbanists and a few others have directed attention toward
the urban crisis and the inherent value of barrio urbanism in the United
States. Increased attention to the Southwest, in relation to civic plazas
(Arreola 2002), the use of open space as community space (Rojas 1999; Gámez 2002), integrated business districts (Dávila 2001), and environmental
justice (Peña 2005, 1998, 1997; Marquez 1998; Pulido 1996), has initiated a
spatial discourse of the barrio. But ironically, adherents to the L.A. perspective, which has famously claimed to “make the invisible visible,” have
apparently failed to incorporate Latinas/os.
12
Introduction
Organization of This Book
This book, then, is part of a broader recent effort to address numerous
issues related to barrio urbanism that have long been neglected in the
planning literature. In the next chapter, “Barrios and Planning Ideology,”
David Diaz, coeditor of this volume, challenges current planning ideology
by claiming that what is being called “New Urbanism” is in reality “barrio urbanism” or “Latina/o urbanism.” The social function of the city that
New Urbanists are trying to restore still exists in barrios and has not fundamentally changed over the past century. The barrio’s cultural logic of a
communally oriented spatial arena that reflects rich interrelationships
and social networks has intrinsic value for planning and urban sociology.
Yet New Urbanism, in what is only the latest form of racialized and exclusionary urban visions, has not even so much undervalued barrio urbanism as totally ignored it. Why? What purpose is served when yet another
“new theory” is propounded that fails to acknowledge enlightened urbanist practice that already exists?
The answer is that New Urbanists, especially architects and planners,
want to evade accountability for the failure of suburbia. The fundamental crisis has finally reached the consciousness of suburbanites who are
trapped on gridlocked freeways, stressed out, frightened by the economy,
and freaking out over housing costs. New Urbanism advocates a reformulation of zoning and design principles that will compel a return to civic
society and restore a social realm. It is a perspective grounded on the acknowledgment that because of suburban sprawl the concept of urban citizenship has virtually disappeared.
Diaz’s chapter shows how the everyday life of el barrio exemplifies a
workable, enduring alternative to the suburban model that has persisted
throughout the decades of failed suburban policy. Compact development,
easy access to shops, live-work spaces, actively used open space, the cultivation of gardens and farms, and an emphasis on walking and public
transportation all produce a vital public realm with flourishing social interaction. This historic urbanism is not “new.”
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13
Introduction
Chapter 3, by Johana Londoño, entitled “Aesthetic Belonging: The Latinization and Renewal of Union City, New Jersey,” is an analysis of the politics of aestheticizing urban places that focuses on a working-class suburban barrio outside New York City. During the past two decades Union
City has been gradually revitalized through New Jersey’s Urban Enterprise
Zone (UEZ) program. Though Bergenline Avenue, the city’s main commercial boulevard, features a colorful, multitextured built environment that
exemplifies the “Latinization” of urban space, upwardly mobile aspirations
among the city’s Latina/o population and gentrification pressures generated by Union City’s geographic proximity to New York City have resulted
in the UEZ’s promotion and financing of its replacement by a modern
“Main Street American” look similar to that of many New Urbanist developments, characterized by muted “classic” colors and clean-cut sign typography. Thus, the aesthetic Latinization of commercial space in Union
City has come into conflict with the UEZ’s definition of what constitutes
a “proper urban aesthetic” for economic development, one that will encourage investment by projecting an image of regulation and uniformity.
According to Londoño, the saying Entre gustos no hay disgustos, which
translates to “In matters of taste there is no debate,” actually dismisses the
power relations involved in the implementation of aesthetics: el gusto’s visual manifestation in cities is laden with discourses of power constituted
by class and racial hierarchies, and the visual aestheticization of cities is a
process by which opinions and perceptions focused on urban spaces are
defined by specific groups with multiple interests. Londoño argues that
economic redevelopment projects in barrios outlying large global cities
engage with culture and ethnicity in different ways from those in historic
central cities, a key factor when analyzing federally urban redevelopment
programs: location plays an important role in whether a Latina/o-identified place will be appreciated and sustained for its economic, social, and
cultural value.
Chapter 4, “Placing Barrios in Housing Policy,” by Kee Warner, examines the magnitude of the housing crisis in Latina/o communities and
traces the history of the policies that have created it. Before the civil
rights era, federal housing policies and programs blatantly excluded racial and ethnic minorities, but even passage of civil rights laws in the
1960s did not eliminate discrimination in public housing. Challenges to
redlining of neighborhoods and to racist exclusion from public housing
projects and programs sought to redress these inequalities, but beginning in the 1970s a devolution of housing policy from federal to state
14
Introduction
and local levels and from public to private initiatives generally weakened programs. Their emphasis shifted from directly assisting low-income consumers of housing, such as renters, to increasing the number
of home owners—a project that in combination with unregulated subprime lending has for many Latina/os, changed their housing problem
from gaining housing in the first place to keeping it. Programs also have
tended to shift funds from affordable housing to community development that favors elites and the middle class over those most in need.
Latinos certainly have not significantly benefited from HUD-funded
programs and reallocation policies initially adopted to address deteriorating residential neighborhoods. The legacy of national legislation
established to assist lower-income areas to improve the housing stock,
revitalize the local economy, and improve social conditions has not reversed a history of underdevelopment, continuing neighborhood decline, and harmful land speculation. Instead, the funding from federal affordable housing programs has been confiscated by local elites for civic
center-, sports- or office-oriented development, so that little has been
directed toward increasing home ownership in barrios. A number of historical factors have blocked a proactive reallocation strategy, including
overt racism, exclusion of Latinos from the political arena, elite control
over land policy, manipulation of federal programs by local elites, rational-functional planning practice, and the inability of federal agencies to
ensure the transfer of knowledge to the community level.
In chapter 5, “Urban Redevelopment and Mexican American Barrios
in the Socio-Spatial Order,” Nestor Rodriguez addresses the effects of urban redevelopment on Mexican American barrios. As he shows, redevelopment policy has conferred little benefit, social or economic, on barrio
communities in decline since the 1960s; indeed, more housing for the poor
has been destroyed than created. Antipoverty programs originally designed to provide affordable housing for poor and working-class communities have been abandoned or manipulated by real estate and investment
banking interests through legislative modifications that have allowed
funding to be diverted to nonresidential development and the building of
commercial districts.
During the most influential period of redevelopment, from the era after
World War II until the early 1970s, barrios absorbed the worst abuses associated with urban reconstruction. Despite campaigns of resistance by barrio residents, numerous communities were destroyed, partially dismantled, and/or excluded from the benefits of redevelopment programs. In
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15
Introduction
fact, the logic of redevelopment destabilized rather than reinvigorated the
economy of the barrio. Redevelopment policy as practiced in this society
viewed barrios as expendable in relation to regional economic development strategy. Barrios, being generally located near downtown business
districts, were prime targets for redevelopment, and residents generally
lacked the political power to prevent their being exploited by outside economic interests.
Redevelopment has never achieved its legislative mandate. It has failed
to increase affordable housing supply, reverse structural decline in minority business districts, empower communities through direct control over
land policy, end employment discrimination, or significantly increase in
employment opportunities—all major urban demands of Latina/o communities to this day.
In chapter 6, “A Pair of Queens: La Reina de Los Angeles, the Queen
City of Charlotte, and the New (Latin) American South,” José Luis Gámez
explores the “invisible terrain” occupied by new Latina/o migrants in
East Los Angeles and Charlotte, North Carolina. In East L.A., established
Latina/o residents and new migrants inhabit separate worlds that rarely
intersect: the latter rarely frequent the public and commercial spaces of
Latina/o East L.A. because they lack the money and social connections
to do so. Often their main social connections are to their homelands. New
migrants are less likely to be home owners, more likely to seek privacy
from a variety of prying eyes, more likely to share housing with other families who are not related by kinship so that even within one house barriers
of privacy are maintained, and less likely to project their identity into their
surroundings in obvious ways. Public socializing does occur but often in
makeshift and temporary spaces out of the view of greater Los Angeles. In
Charlotte, most of the Latina/o population consists of such new migrants,
who have moved into aging auto-oriented suburban landscapes no longer
attractive to middle-class residents, and who maintain a very similar way
of life to that of the migrants in L.A. Even here, however, migrant communities have initiated spatial transformations: vendors’ trucks, for example, are revitalizing nondescript, marginal suburban spaces, though such
transformations are often resisted by civic officials as evidence of urban
decline or nonconformity to local regulations.
In chapter 7, “Fostering Diversity: Lessons from Integration in Public
Housing,” Silvia Domínguez reports the author’s fieldwork concerning two
sets of Latina/o residents in public housing in Boston in 2000: residents
of Maverick Gardens in East Boston, near a busy Latina/o enclave, and
16
Introduction
residents of Mary Ellen McCormack in South Boston, in an Irish American
neighborhood. These public housing developments, like others in Boston,
had been court-ordered to integrate in 1988. The author expected a particularly hostile reception to Latina/o immigrants in South Boston, given
that white neighborhood’s long history of antagonism toward integration.
But she found that although South Boston was historically prepared to engage in a black-white struggle, there were no cognitive frames for a struggle against Latina/os. Further, the Latina/os, who also had no such cognitive frames, tended to defuse antagonism directed toward them by white
community members and to point out problems and issues that the two
groups shared. Racism was openly voiced in public forums, but the threat
of gentrification, affecting all residents, made racial struggles increasingly
irrelevant.
In East Boston racial tensions had decreased as the onetime majority
Italian Americans diffused into surrounding neighborhoods and as wave
after wave of Latina/o immigrants entered. But systematic, unvoiced racism continued to operate in the Maverick Gardens Tenant Task Force,
where the Italian American minority maintained undemocratic control
and cultivated patronage ties with the Boston Housing Authority. And for
Maverick Gardens residents, the presence of co-ethnics in the neighborhood did not prove to be an advantage, since members of the Latina/o
community outside the project often resented the “free ride” that project residents were getting. The economic fortunes of residents in the two
projects turned out to depend primarily on the professionalism of the two
tenant task forces: Maverick’s did not show leadership in disseminating
information, democratizing the board of directors, or forging ties with local service organizations, whereas McCormack’s task force provided culturally responsive services that enabled many project residents to achieve
economic and residential mobility.
In chapter 8, “Mexican Americans and Environmental Justice: Change
and Continuity in Mexican American Politics,” Benjamin Marquez traces the history of the Latina/o environmental justice movement and
assesses its future prospects. This movement arose from a break with
the mainstream, Anglo-dominated environmental movement; Latina/o
activists criticized it as being more concerned with the preservation
of pristine recreational areas than with the issues most likely to affect
poor and nonwhite communities, primarily exposure to toxins from illegal dumping, lead paint in aging homes, commercial pesticide use,
dangerous working conditions, and the location of polluting industries
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17
Introduction
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