Since America is gradually becoming the majority of colored people, there are already dozens of cities there. This city's transformation is based on an increase in inequality and sustained racial inequality. The resulting friction sometimes becomes shadowed and in the long run it may hurt the wonderful opportunity of updating the city. In order to maintain competitive advantage, the city has to deal with the following troublesome problem.
To answer these questions, we need to think about new things about employment creation, education, housing, economic development, and everything that will grow the city. At the same time, we need to make innovative area efforts to begin to integrate the achievement of racial equality and the establishment of the city in the 21st century. In this course we will explore how cities can deal with these challenges through policy intervention.
In the presidential election year, protests by race and group swept the major cities of the United States and caused intense political debate. The lack of economic opportunities and wrongful anger and frustration of the justice system have led to severe party rhetoric, and in the worst case street violence. According to a strict identity group, citizens increasingly define their best interests. Young people in Zakber format say their entrepreneurial spirit changed the world, but the overall percentage of people under 30 years old is the lowest in decades. According to last year's Wall Street Journal report, only 6% of families led by Millennium had shares of private companies, from 1% in 2010 to 10.6% in 1989.
Before the spirit of William Potter 's era reported horse racing (and junior boxing), most upper class citizens considered sports a vulgar hobby. The industrial revolution of the 1950s attracted many immigrants from American cities and eventually gave the spirit of 100,000 readers and expanded the lower class audience. In the 1920s, a daily sports version appeared. Sports writer Lawrence Winner says: "In the 1930s survey, 80% of male newspaper readers have found that they often read certain parts of sports pages."
This course is based on the regional viewpoint of major American writers of the 20th century. In American literature, races and nations are not merely descriptive terms, but living environments. Being an ethnic or ethnic subject sometimes lives in a different United States as a physical isolation, sometimes as a metaphor. The writers we learn in this course explain geography of race and race in various ways. Among other things, the United States may be in the position of promised land, prison, museum or elevator
Ever since urbanization began in European cities, there was always separation, regardless of whether it is a class, socio-economic status, political faction, etc. In contemporary American cities stratification is most closely related to class and race. There are many reasons for sorting cities, and we will explore more general social stratagism ideas. When the American city center began to form, people went to these industrial cities in groups to find work and success. We have studied the impact of such large immigrants on cities and have seen a terrible living environment where people can endure job hunting activities. Overcrowding of the city makes the slums obvious, and wealth is not directly related to immigrants. Over the years urban areas have grown in new suburban cities surrounded by cities. Wealthy people live in these suburbs and can get in and out of the city as they wish.