Individual Submission Summary
Share...

Direct link:

Legislating Action: Exploring the Antagonistic Relationship of Highways in Black Communities and Neighborhoods

Thu, March 7, 9:30 to 10:45am, Hilton San Jose, Floor: Lobby, Almaden Ballroom

Abstract

Highways and interstates are more than just convenient ways to travel from place-to-place, they are symbols of freedom and American connectedness. Unfortunately, Black people all over the United States are forced to operate parallel to this notion, as these ideas of freedom and connectedness have historically excluded them. If there is anything that Black people in the US know for sure, it is that highways have not only been a consistent cause of community and neighborhood destruction, uprooted families, and segregation, but also, an important part in the structural nature of white hegemony. Highways (also referred to as interstates) have been increasingly utilized as a tool for oppression and destruction, in both de jure and de facto interpretations of inequality. Blackness, therefore, remains in constant angst due to actions of the majority. Government administrations, city councils, housing associations, banks, and politicians alike, are all interconnected in the segregation and destruction of Black communities with the development of highways. This paper is a continuation of a larger project regarding protest, free speech, and law enforcement, seeks to uncover some of the historical challenges Black communities have faced with highways and interstates.

Author