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What Happened to the Toronto Slums & Where Did All the Poor Go? (1866-1946) (Hardcover)
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What Happened to the Toronto Slums & Where Did All the Poor Go? (1866-1946) (Hardcover)
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By the late 19th century and the early 20th century, there were at
least nineteen large and small areas, streets or neighbourhoods
that were declared or labelled slums in Toronto. By the 1960s,
almost all the slums had been cleared and were replaced by
institutional, governmental and residential modern buildings.
However, the foot prints of these slums, their boundaries and
characteristics of their residents had been lost. This book intends
to trace the development of these slums and outline their
lifecycles. Although the book deals with all major Toronto slums,
the emphasis focuses on Regent Park, which replaced the largest
Anglo-Saxon slum in North America named Cabbagetown. Regent Park
was also the first large housing project that received the approval
from Toronto electors, which partially replaced Cabbagetown. In
order to comprehend why Toronto ratepayers approved the project, we
are considering the movement to implement the project (that had
been recommended by the Curtis Report) as a social movement for
affordable housing and utilising the Resource Mobilization Approach
(RMA) to analyse and evaluate the success and/or failure of the
project. In this book, the authors want to challenge the widely
held assumption that policy making in Canada was an elite process
primarily involving Cabinet ministers and senior civil servants by
bringing the citizens participation back in and highlighting their
critical role in challenging the governments housing policy and the
building of Regent Park. This book has two parts: the first part
examines the fate of the slum dwellers. Now that slums are gone,
what happened to the poor working classes that used to live in
these slums? The second part argues that when all the slums in the
old city dissolve and are replaced by luxury condominiums and
expensive gentrified homes, where will the recent immigrants go for
accommodation? The recent information indicates that the majority
of the low-income immigrants are seeking accommodations in the
high-rise apartments of St. James Town or in the inner suburb
communities in Scarborough, North York and Etobicocke. As these
high-rise apartment buildings (mainly built in the 1980s and 1990s)
age and deteriorate while overcrowding continues, there is a
possibility that what happened in the late 19th century and the
beginning of the 20th century will be repeated, causing the
development of new slums. This alone should draw the attention of
the municipal government and is one of the goals of the authors of
this book.
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