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race, housing, and the making of twentieth-century louisville, kentucky

sarah hardin blum

"Examining the struggle over where African Americans should live in Louisville, this dissertation illustrates the limitations of public policy to eradicate private prejudice and structural racism. Despite the passage of federal and local legislation against discrimination, African Americans continued to be relegated to the West End of the city. In the end, Louisville remained one of the nation’s most segregated cities at the end of the twentieth century."

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