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- Exclusionary_zoning abstract "Exclusionary zoning is the utilization of zoning ordinances to exclude certain types of people from a given community. This mechanism began gaining prominence in land-use regulations throughout the United States in the late 19th century. Ultimately, despite resistance from excluded peoples and activists, the policy is still extensively used today across the country.The vast, land-rich country upheld the notion that state powers should not interfere with private property. Also, given the country's predominately rural and isolated composition, most citizens were unconcerned about who their neighbors were at the time. Thus, early Americans largely disapproved of any early attempts at exclusionary zoning.However, around the turn of the 20th century, a rapid urbanization process and influx of immigrants transformed the country. Middle and upper-classes consequently encountered much greater diversity than they had before making the intrusion of unwanted people into their neighborhoods appear more conceivable. As a result, many cities began implementing the first exclusionary zoning policies. In 1908, Los Angeles adopted the first citywide zoning ordinance protecting residential areas from the entrance of these undesirable community elements. Many of these early regulations directly debarred racial and ethnic minorities from community residence until explicit racial zoning was declared unconstitutional in 1917. Despite the unconstitutionality of such explicit measures, exclusionary ordinances continued to gain popularity throughout the country.Given the increased utilization of exclusionary zoning, the United States federal government finally addressed the issue with the enactment of the Standard State Zoning Enabling Act of 1922. This legislation established the institutional framework for zoning ordinances. It delegated land-use power to local authorities for the conservation of community welfare and provided guidelines for appropriate regulation usage. In light of these developments, the Supreme Court considered zoning's constitutionality in the 1926 landmark case of Village of Euclid, Ohio v. Ambler Realty Co.. The court ultimately condoned zoning as an acceptable means of community regulation. Following this verdict, the number of municipalities with zoning legislation multiplied from 368 in 1925 to over 1,000 in 1930.Following World War II's end and the country's subsequent suburbanization process, exclusionary zoning policies experienced an uptick in complexity, stringency and prevalence as suburbanites attempted to more effectively protect their new communities. Many people had severed ties with the city and its unwanted elements as they searched for their suburban utopia. They feared that these very city elements that they escaped would follow them into the suburbs if left unchecked. Thus, middle-class and affluent white, who constituted the majority of suburban inhabitants,more frequently employed measures preventing immigrant and minority integration. As a result of resident's newly found protectionism, the number of jurisdictions with such ordinances increased to over 5,200 by 1968.While well-off whites mainly inhabited the suburbs, the remaining city residents, primarily impoverished minorities, faced substantial obstacles to wealth. Many attributed their impecunious state to their exclusion from the suburbs. In response, a flurry of exclusionary zoning cases were brought before the Supreme Court in the 1970s that would ultimately determine the tactic's fate. The Supreme Court sided with the proponents of exclusionary zoning in near unanimity which virtually halted any zoning reform movement. Minorities', and other excluded populations, ability to challenge exclusionary zoning became essentially nonexistent allowing the policy's unabated continuation today.Currently, exclusionary zoning ordinances are standard in almost all communities. A recent comprehensive survey found that over 80% of United States jurisdictions imposed minimum lot size requirements of some kind on their inhabitants. No longer are these mechanisms exclusively used by the privileged upper-class. Now, they are ubiquitous in nearly all aspects of American society as a means of preserving community characteristics.".
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageID "20843226".
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageLength "28726".
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageOutDegree "43".
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageRevisionID "665710153".
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Affordable_housing.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Bond_(finance).
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Buchanan_v._Warley.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Building_permit.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Category:Affordable_housing.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Category:Segregation.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Category:Zoning.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Certificate_of_occupancy.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Construction_permit.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Economic_discrimination.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Education_inequality.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Educational_attainment_in_the_United_States.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Educational_inequality.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Filing_(legal).
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Freedom_of_contract.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Gentrification.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Housing_segregation.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Housing_segregation_in_the_United_States.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Inclusionary_zoning.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Liberty.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Multi-family_residential.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Population_density.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Prejudice.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Property_rights.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Property_value.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Real_estate_appraisal.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Real_estate_economics.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Red_tape.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Regulation.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Residential_segregation.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Right_to_property.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Setback_(land_use).
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Social_exclusion.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Social_stratification.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Standard_State_Zoning_Enabling_Act.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Status_attainment.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Suburbanization.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Urban_decay.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Urban_planning.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Urbanization.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Variance_(land_use).
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Village_of_Euclid,_Ohio_v._Ambler_Realty_Co..
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Village_of_Euclid_v._Ambler_Realty_Co..
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Warth_v._Seldin.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink Zoning.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLink File:Chicago_Race_and_Ethnicity_2010.jpg.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLinkText "Exclusionary zoning".
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageWikiLinkText "exclusionary zoning".
- Exclusionary_zoning hasPhotoCollection Exclusionary_zoning.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refimprove.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Exclusionary_zoning wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Segregation_by_type.
- Exclusionary_zoning subject Category:Affordable_housing.
- Exclusionary_zoning subject Category:Segregation.
- Exclusionary_zoning subject Category:Zoning.
- Exclusionary_zoning hypernym Utilization.
- Exclusionary_zoning type Article.
- Exclusionary_zoning type Article.
- Exclusionary_zoning type Study.
- Exclusionary_zoning comment "Exclusionary zoning is the utilization of zoning ordinances to exclude certain types of people from a given community. This mechanism began gaining prominence in land-use regulations throughout the United States in the late 19th century. Ultimately, despite resistance from excluded peoples and activists, the policy is still extensively used today across the country.The vast, land-rich country upheld the notion that state powers should not interfere with private property.".
- Exclusionary_zoning label "Exclusionary zoning".
- Exclusionary_zoning sameAs m.056snvd.
- Exclusionary_zoning sameAs Exclusionary_zoning.
- Exclusionary_zoning sameAs Q5419676.
- Exclusionary_zoning sameAs Q5419676.
- Exclusionary_zoning wasDerivedFrom Exclusionary_zoning?oldid=665710153.
- Exclusionary_zoning isPrimaryTopicOf Exclusionary_zoning.