Community displacement

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Community displacement is the movement of a population out of a neighborhood as formal or informal redevelopment occurs. Community displacement is a key argument against informal and formal urban renewal projects.[1] The implication is that the benefits calculus[clarification needed] undervalues the interests of the community residents who will be displaced.[citation needed]

The 1949 Housing Act described the movement of populations out of blighted areas as planned shrinkage.[2] The academic literature describes this movement as serial displacement. Recently, the terms urban displacement and community displacement are used commonly.[3]

Community displacement is used to describe movement in urban areas, while development-induced displacement typically describes movement connected with rural projects, such as dam projects. Community displacement should not be confused with white flight, a phenomenon whereby white residents voluntarily move away from an area as it increases in racial diversity.

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