Digital Resourses
Articles, Studies, Tools, and More!
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Gentrified. Anna Holme. The Dispatch - James Bowie High School Newspaper. December 2021.
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PODER archive https://txarchives.org/aushc/finding_aids/00374.xml
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Sylvia Herrera, Oral History https://digitalcollections.briscoecenter.org/islandora/object/islandora%3A2970
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Susana Almanza, Oral History https://digitalcollections.briscoecenter.org/islandora/object/islandora%3A2748
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The People’s Plan: 6 Resolutions or Draft Ordinances that City Council Can Implement Now
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Contributing to the Legacy of Austin’s Racism in Land Development Planning
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Those who Stayed: The Impact of Gentrification on Longstanding Residents of Austin. Eric Tang, University of Texas at Austin. 2018.
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Housing Affordability in Austin Brings New Attention to Mobile Home Parks. Amaro, Gabriel, Ph.D. University of Texas at Austin Latino Research Initiative, College of Liberal Arts. 2017.
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Outlier: The Case of Austin’s Declining African-American Population, 2014. Eric Tang and Chunhui Ren, University of Texas at Austin
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Who Owns Our Cities? Susana Almanza, PODER. Spring 2008.
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SMART Growth, Historic Zoning and Gentrification of East Austin: Continued Relocation of Native People from Their Homeland. Almanza, Susana, Sylvia Herrera, Ph.D.,and Librado Almanza, 2002. PODER.
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Texas Legacy Interview. October 2003​
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Housing Patterns Study: Segregation and Discrimination in Austin, Texas. Austin Human Relations Commission. City of Austin History Center. 1979.
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ejatlas.org/
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Environmental Justice (EJ) Principles: Delegates to the First National People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit held on October 24-27, 1991, in Washington DC, drafted and adopted 17 principles of Environmental Justice. Since then, The Principles have served as a defining document for the growing grassroots movement for environmental justice.
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Jemez Principles for Democratic Organizing: On December 6-8, 1996, forty people of color and European-American representatives met in Jemez, New Mexico, for the 'Working Group Meeting on Globalization and Trade'. The Jemez meeting was hosted by the Southwest Network for Environmental and Economic Justice with the intention of hammering out common understandings between participants from different cultures, politics and organizations. The following 'Jemez Principles' for democratic organizing were adopted by the participants.
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