Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 September 2025
Chapter 10 uses Louisville, Kentucky (a metropolitan area with eviction rates double the national average) as a case study to critique how housing markets and eviction practices not only favor landlords’ property rights over the rights of tenants but also play important roles in maintaining racial segregation and in the day-to-day marginalized lives of the urban poor. Evictions perpetuate racial inequity and segregation in housing and are embedded within a system of white privilege that benefits historically white places. Eviction rates are compared to housing segregation patterns generally and to the historic redlining maps specifically to show the relationships of these racially unequal patterns of housing opportunity. Eviction is a means of control of disadvantaged neighborhoods and an institutionalization of racism in the urban landscape.
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