2008
DOI: 10.1177/0885412207310146
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Latino Communities in the United States: Place-Making in the Pre-World War II, Postwar, and Contemporary City

Abstract: Scholarship on Latino communities in the UnitedStates has yet to catch up with the rapid growth of this ethnic population in the country. Understanding the Latino urban experience and developing plans to better respond to both the needs of Latino communities and their integration within society is not only relevant, but also urgently necessary. Using the city of Los Angeles as a main lens, in addition to a general look at the urban Southwest, we contribute to the scholarship on the subject with a review of lit… Show more

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Cited by 34 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…The study particularly expands the ethical call for planners to contribute to progressive struggles for greater rights to the city and socio-spatial justice for minoritized groups (Carpio, Irazábal, and Pulido 2011;Irazábal and Dyrness 2010;Irazábal and Farhat 2008;Kotin, Dyrness, and Irazábal 2011). We expose how FIERCE and their allies have resisted displacement and defended access to certain spaces, amenities, and services with relative success.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…The study particularly expands the ethical call for planners to contribute to progressive struggles for greater rights to the city and socio-spatial justice for minoritized groups (Carpio, Irazábal, and Pulido 2011;Irazábal and Dyrness 2010;Irazábal and Farhat 2008;Kotin, Dyrness, and Irazábal 2011). We expose how FIERCE and their allies have resisted displacement and defended access to certain spaces, amenities, and services with relative success.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…It tries to ensure more equitable and democratic participation by removing obstacles that have prevented minorities from becoming involved in citymaking processes (Corburn, 2003;Fainstein, 2000;Irazábal & Farhat, 2008). Through multicultural planning, new views on ethno-racial groups' identity politics and actions can be propounded by changing stereotypes and stigmas (Irazábal, 2011), for example, by enhancing the economic potential of their business activities and making visible their work contribution to local economies (Bubinas, 2005;Irazábal & Gómez-Barris, 2007;Miraftab, 2011;Miraftab & McConnell, 2008).…”
Section: Multicultural Planningmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…These historical and contemporary dynamics have occurred through spatial, subjective, and economic processes of displacement from/within the us, and migration from the so-called Third World to the first (Irazábal & farhat, 2008). an important violent marker and rupture in social identities happened in the 19th century, during the Mexican american war (1846-1848), which led to the signing of the Treaty of Guadalupe hidalgo in 1848 in which present day arizona, California, new Mexico and parts of Colorado, nevada and utah, or Mexico's northern third, was annexed by the us.…”
Section: The Tourism Of Staying Putmentioning
confidence: 99%