@article{TEXTUAL,
      recid = {7013},
      author = {Conte, Julia and Li, Janet},
      title = {Neoliberal Urban Revitalization in Chicago},
      journal = {Advocates' Forum, 2013},
      address = {2013},
      number = {TEXTUAL},
      abstract = {Over the last two decades, Chicago’s strategy to  revitalize areas of economic decline and concentrated  poverty centered on two federal housing programs: Housing  Opportunities for People Everywhere (HOPE VI) and its  latter incarnation, Choice Neighborhoods. This paper  examines the ideological turn from Keynesian New Deal  policies to neoliberal revitalization programs and explores  the programs’ strategies to transform low-income, minority  residents into “self-sufficient” market actors who benefit  from a revitalized neighborhood’s improved amenities.  Finally, the paper argues that both policies will not  mitigate concentrated poverty, as their neoliberal approach  is nominally redistributive. With its ability to intervene  in the market and economic processes, government  intervention is better positioned to address the economic  and racial inequalities that produced such poverty in the  first place.},
      url = {http://knowledge.uchicago.edu/record/7013},
      doi = {https://doi.org/10.6082/uchicago.7013},
}