Textbook
Public Housing Myths: Perception, Reality, and Sosial Policy
If American urbanists and politicians share any conventional wisdom across political divides, it is the idea that public housing failed in every possible dimension. Public housing has, indeed, come a long way from the idyllic interwar images of children frolicking in landscaped courtyards, tidy brick buildings, and presentable families. These dreamy places—and the promised step forward from decaying and crowded urban slums—sent countries around the globe down the road to public housing construction (Figure I.1). Since then, however, endless portraits of derelict towers, rampant criminality, and unchecked disorder have contrasted sharply with public housing’s idealistic aspirations.
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