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Karl Marx`s disciples, following his lead, have long belived that class Identity is forged in the workplace - on the factory floor, so to speak. Yet class today is not just about the kind of work we do but also about the places in which we livem which shape everything from our access to jobs and economic opportunity to the schools our kids attend, our health and well-being, and Our prospects for upward mobility.

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... rich and poor increasingly occupy entirely different spaces and worlds.

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When reacherchers at the IMF looked at the Connections between inequality, Growth and redistribution across nations they reached Three very important conclusions. First, countries that redistribute more income have lower rates of ineguality. Second, countries with greater Levels of redistribution have higher Levels of economic growth. And Third, goverment policies that work to reduce inequality actually lead to higher rates of growth.

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...gentrification amounts to rich white people pushing poor black ones out of their neighborhoods and their homes.

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PREFACE
I was born in Newark, New Jersey, in 1957, back when it was a thriving
city, bustling with iconic department stores,
morning and evening newspapers, libraries and museums, a busy downtown,
and a large middle class. (...)
My parents, like millions of other Americans, moved to the suburbs
when I was a toddler.

/ /

Then, one hot July day in 1967, when I was nine years old,
I saw the city overtaken by turmoil.
As my father drove us into the city, the air grew thick with smoke:
Newark was engulfed in its infamous riots,
and police, National Guardsmen, and military vehicles lined its streets.

Eventually, a policeman flagged us down to warn us about "snipers."
As my father anxiously turned the car around, he instructed me to
lie down on the floor for safety.
More than two dozen people, mostly African Americans, died in Newark
over the next several days;
750 more were injured, and another 1,000 jailed.
Property damage was estimated in millions of dollars.
The devastating riots boiled over into many other cities, including nearby
New Brunswick and Plainfield, New Jersey; Detroit and Cincinnati in the
Rustbelt; and Atlanta in the South.
It would become known as the "long, hot summer of 1967."

In most cases, the precipitating event was police violence toward blacks,
but the root causes ran deeper. Jobs and economic activity, as well as
the largely white working and middle classes, had been moving out of those
cities for some time,
and many blacks, who had been moving into them as part of their Great
Migration from the South, were packed into urban ghettos.
_
I was witnessing the unfolding of what would come to be called
"the urban crisis."
For all of my life (...) all of modern history—cities had been centers
of industry, economic growth, and cultural achievement.
By the late 1960s and 1970s, that was no longer the case.
Middle-class people and jobs were fleeing cities like Newark for the suburbs,
leaving their economies hollowed out.
By the time I entered high school in the early 1970s, huge stretches
of Newark had fallen victim to economic decay, rising crime and violence,
and racially concentrated poverty.

( forlagsinnledning )

( omtale NYtimes )

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