Living Apart: How the Government Betrayed a Landmark Civil Rights Law

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ProPublica, Oct 29, 2012 - Social Science - 38 pages
ProPublica’s groundbreaking investigation into housing segregation, and the federal government’s large-scale failure to uphold the laws meant to prevent it
More than forty years after President Johnson signed the landmark Fair Housing Act into law, residential segregation in America remains unresolved. Designed to help dismantle the nation’s racially divided housing patterns, the act has gone largely ignored by every presidential administration—Democrat and Republican alike—since 1968.  In Living Apart, ProPublica investigates this failing, particularly how subsequent leaders, following President Nixon’s lead, have declined to use the billions in grant dollars awarded by the Department of Housing and Urban Development as leverage to fight segregation. Their reluctance to enforce a law passed by both houses of Congress and repeatedly upheld by the courts reflects a larger political reality. Again and again, attempts to create integrated neighborhoods have foundered This ebook includes an exclusive afterword by the author, as well as an appendix of original documents dating from the Nixon administration, revealing the internal politics swirling around the Fair Housing Act shortly after its enactment. 

About the author (2012)

Nikole Hannah-Jones has reported for the largest daily newspaper in the Pacific Northwest, the Oregonian in Portland, Oregon. She covered numerous beats at the Oregonian including demographics, the census, and county government. Before that she covered the majority-black Durham Public Schools for the News & Observer in Raleigh, North Carolina. During her three years as a reporter there, Hannah-Jones wrote extensively on issues of race, class, school re-segregation, and equity. She received the Society of Professional Journalists Pacific Northwest Excellence in Journalism Award three times, among other commendations. She joined ProPublica in 2011. 

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