ABSTRACT
This edited collection examines joint efforts by Latinos and African Americans to confront problems faced by populations of both groups in urban settings (in particular, socioeconomic disadvantage and concentration in inner cities). The essays address two major issues: experiences and bases for collaboration and contention between the two groups; and the impact of urban policies and initiatives of recent decades on Blacks and Latinos in central cities.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter Chapter 2|24 pages
The Restructuring of Urban Relations
Recent Challenges and Dilemmas for African Americans and Latinos in U.S. Cities
chapter Chapter 3|18 pages
African Americans and Puerto Ricans in New York
Cycles and Circles of Discrimination
chapter Chapter 4|29 pages
The African American and Latino Coalition Experience in Chicago Under Mayor Harold Washington
chapter Chapter 6|22 pages
Displaced Labor Migrants or the “Underclass”
African Americans and Puerto Ricans in Philadelphia's Economy
chapter Chapter 7|19 pages
Pulling Together or Pulling Apart?
Black—Latino Cooperation and Competition in the U.S. Labor Market
chapter Chapter 8|19 pages
Can't We All Just Get Along?
Interethnic Organization for Economic Development
chapter Chapter 9|20 pages
Building Networks to Tackle Global Restructuring
The Environmental and Economic Justice Movement
chapter Chapter 10|17 pages
Black and Latino Coalitions
Means to Greater Budget Resources for Their Communities?
chapter Chapter 12|23 pages
Understanding the Future
Toward a Strategy for Black and Latino Survival and Liberation in the Twenty-First Century
chapter Chapter 13|6 pages
The Possibilities of Collaboration and the Challenges of Contention
Concluding Remarks