ABSTRACT

Perhaps the most practical approach to modern segregation that planners have put forward is that of Lynch Kevin. A, which focuses on the grain of the social geography, that is, the desired scale of social mixing. Nowadays, most governments prefer to assist the private market, usually by providing financial subsidies to developers in order to lower the costs of housing on the market, or by providing subsidies to households to aid them in either renting or buying housing. So far, the authors have focused mainly on the challenge of incorporating affordable housing into new developments or urban districts. Mixed-income apartment complexes of this type are the most ambitious forms of inclusionary development, since they accomplish social mix while solving the usual challenges posed by unequal urban access and services, stigmatization, and middle-class aesthetic standards. Concerns about the transformation of public housing neighborhoods into segregated ghettoes have thus become salient.