Geographies of displacement: Latina/os, oral history, and the politics of gentrification in San Francisco's Mission District. The Public historian [Public Hist] Journal article | | Title | Geographies of displacement: Latina/os, oral history, and the politics of gentrification in San Francisco's Mission District. | | Author(s) | Mirabal NR | | Institution | San Francisco State University, USA. | | Source | Public Hist 2009 May; 31(2):7-31. | | Abstract | During the 1990s and early 2000s, working-class and poor neighborhoods in San Francisco underwent dramatic economic and racial changes. One of the most heavily gentrified neighborhoods was the Mission District. As a result of local politics, housing and rental policies, real estate speculation, and development, thousands of Latina/o families were displaced. Using oral historical and ethnographic methodologies, print media, archival sources, and policy papers, this article traces the gentrification of the Mission District from the perspective of the Latina/o community. It also examines how gentrification was articulated as a positive turn within the larger public discourse on space and access. | | Language | eng | | Pub Type(s) | Journal Article
| | PubMed ID | 19824231 |
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