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'Evicted' probes the multiple dimensions of the housing crisis

Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City

by Matthew Desmond
(Crown Publishers,
2016;
$37.00)

Once bursting with well-paying jobs in the brewing and manufacturing industries, Milwaukee, Wisconsin is now the second-poorest city in America. Over 170,000 people, including 41 per cent of the city's African-American and 32 per cent of the city's Hispanic residents, are living in poverty.

Between 2009 and 2011, one in eight Milwaukee residents were forced from their homes by eviction or foreclosure. Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City tells their stories. Written by Matthew Desmond, now a Harvard sociologist, the book follows eight families, Black and white, who struggle to keep a roof over their heads.

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Starting a co-operative

sign from a local food co-op

Co-ops are any place run by its members, for its members. Instead of shareholders, there are stakeholders. For example, a housing co-op is owned run by the people who live there, a food co-op is owned run by people who buy that food and a workplace co-op is owned run by the workers. There's no middleman making money off of people's labours. The people who own and manage the co-op are also the ones who use it.

Co-ops are anti-hieratical and operate more horizontally. Everyone has an equal stake in the co-op and therefore has an equal say about how things are run. Some co-operatives use elected board members to make decisions but smaller co-ops just decide how things are run amongst themselves. There's typically more control and direct involvement in smaller co-ops.

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Will Gordo be evicted?

It's election day in B.C. These housing activists would like to see Premier Gordon Campbell evicted after eight years in power. Info: http://rentersfightback.wordpress.com/. (Photo: The Blackbird)

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