Skip to main content
Home
  • RP&E
    • About RP&E
    • Current Issue
    • Order Back Issues
    • View Back Issues by Date
    • Jobs at Reimagine!
  • Podcasts
  • Issue Areas
    • Environmental and Climate Justice
      • Environmental Health
      • Climate Justice
      • Energy
      • Food
    • Racial & Gender Justice
      • Migrant Rights
      • Education
      • Gender Analysis
    • Economic Justice
      • Jobs
      • Global Trade
    • Urban Justice
      • Regionalism
      • Housing
      • Transportation
  • Research
    • Climate Change
    • Economic Justice
      • Excluded workers
      • Local Hire
    • Housing and Urban Planning
      • Transportation
      • Business Improvement Districts
    • Racial and Gender Justice
    • Environmental Justice
  • Strategies for Change
    • Arts & Culture
    • Democratization
    • Global Solidarity
    • Movement Building
  • Contact
    • Reimagine Workers
    • Services
    • Jobs at Reimagine!
  • Donate
    • Join
    • Write
  • Search

Analysis

Tweet
  • Claiming the Right to the City
  • Gentrifying Downtown Miami
  • Segregated Housing: Martin Luther King to Cabrini Green
  • Tax Credits for Developers, Bulldozers for the Poor
  • New Orleans Black Diaspora: Will the Residents Come Back?
  • Hope VI Mixed-Income Housing Projects Displace Poor People
  • Privatizing Public Services Imperils Cities
  • Selling Our City To Lennar Corporation
  • Tenants Plus Land Trust Beat Gentrification
  • Can Redevelopment Slow the Black Middle Class Exodus?
  • Without Housing, Without Rights
  • Pay Dirt: State Tax Policies Drive Local Land Use Policies to Ground
‹ Livable Communities up Claiming the Right to the City ›
  • Printer-friendly version

Who Owns Our Cities?

  • 15-1 Credits
  • Introduction
  • Analysis
    • Claiming the Right to the City
    • Gentrifying Downtown Miami
    • Segregated Housing: Martin Luther King to Cabrini Green
    • Tax Credits for Developers, Bulldozers for the Poor
    • New Orleans Black Diaspora: Will the Residents Come Back?
    • Hope VI Mixed-Income Housing Projects Displace Poor People
    • Privatizing Public Services Imperils Cities
    • Selling Our City To Lennar Corporation
    • Tenants Plus Land Trust Beat Gentrification
    • Can Redevelopment Slow the Black Middle Class Exodus?
    • Without Housing, Without Rights
    • Pay Dirt: State Tax Policies Drive Local Land Use Policies to Ground
  • Case Studies
  • Visions of Richmond, California
  • Resources

About RP&E

  • About
  • 2005-13
  • 1995-2005

Project Director and Editor: Jess Clarke

Web Editor and Designer: Christine Joy Ferrer

Contributing Editor: Preeti Shekar

Contributing Editor: Jarrel Philips

Contributing Editor: Margi Clarke

Former Editors

Contributing Editors (2014-2017): Marcy Rein, Bob Allen, Eric Arnold, J. Douglas Allen-Taylor

Associate Editor: (2007-2017): Merula Furtado

RP&E is the national journal of environmental and social justice. Since 1990, it has served as an essential tool for building the movements for justice through reporting, analysis and research.

Annual subscriptions are available for $45 for individuals and $90 for institutions. Archival issues of RP&E Journal dating back to 1990 are available and may be obtained online, in print or on CD.

Submissions
We welcome participation from writers and organizers committed to using a race, class and gender analysis in their work. Letters to the editor and articles that meet our submission guidelines may be sent to: reimaginerpe [at] gmail.com or by postal mail to:

RP&E Journal
Reimagine!

436 14th St., #500
Oakland, CA  94612 

Tweet
Related Stories: 
About
  • Read more about About Race, Poverty and the Environment

Donations over $50 receive an
annual subscription and more.

Search form

Sign up for email newsletter






Support Reimagine!

  • Email List
  • New
  • Donate

Join our low-volume email list

By Jess Clarke

Today’s emerging resistance movements can draw on a long and varied history to challenge the reactionary US government. Racial justice organizing has been the leading edge of progressive change for generations, and lessons learned and leadership from Black liberation struggles are key to moving beyond resistance and toward revolutionary abundance.

Tweet
Related Stories: 
Racial and Gender Justice
  • Read more about Conversations on Race and Resistance

Suggested donation levels are $45 for individuals, $90 for organizations and libraries, and $250 for an education pack. 2020 Premium Selections:

Choose Acknowledgment Gift - Donation Level
Tweet
  • Read more about Donations / Subscriptions
Tweet

Search form

Keep this movement making resource alive! Celebrate 30 years of RP&E by giving $30!  Like what you are reading and seeing here? Want to keep up to date with frontline analysis of the social movments of our time? Or donate any amount: $2, $3, $5, $10, $25. . . Donations over $45 receive a book-length printed printed edition delivered to you at a postal address and more.

Reimagine!
Race Poverty and the Environment
RadioRPE
C/O MSC 436 14th St. Fifth Floor, Oakland, CA 94612
(775) 773-8395
© Copyright by the individual creators. Creative Commons licensing is available for many articles. See: Reprint permissions and Copyright Infringement Policy

Site Credits :: Log in