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Left Behind in Rosedale is a stunning analysis of community and
neighborhood decline. Through creative application of ethnographic
analysis, participant observation, and in-depth interviews, Scott
Cummings' unique book breathes human life into one of the most
serious problems facing the nation's cities: the ghettoization of
urban neighborhoods. Tra
"Left Behind in Rosedale" is a stunning analysis of community and
neighborhood decline. Through creative application of ethnographic
analysis, participant observation, and in-depth interviews, Scott
Cummings' unique book breathes human life into one of the most
serious problems facing the nation's cities: the ghettoization of
urban neighborhoods. Transcending demographic and statistical
analysis, he vividly and passionately tells the story of
ghettoization by explaining what happens to people's lives during
the process of racial transition and change.Cummings takes the
reader on a distressing historical journey, detailing the
progressive decline of one community's culture. Along the way, he
explains and explores the futile attempts of its white elderly
residents to maintain their traditional way of life. He then moves
to an examination of the black youth who victimize the elderly and
explains the family and gang context of their actions. Moving full
circle some fifteen years later, after the collapse of Rosedale is
nearly complete, Cummings documents the similar plight facing the
black elderly and details the grinding poverty that has enveloped
the entire community. He concludes by evaluating the community's
effort to revitalize itself and explains why these efforts
failed.Cummings uses the case of Rosedale as a window to explore
and critically evaluate the evolution of American urban policy over
the past forty years. He concludes that many of our efforts to
solve urban problems have actually made them worse. This book
should be read by liberals and conservatives alike, neighborhood
and community activists, politicians and reformers, urban planners
of American cities, and citizens who want to know why government
efforts to revitalize urban neighborhoods have accomplished so
little.
This publication seeks to correct a major weakness limiting the
study of underwater archeological sites: a set of unquestioned
assumptions regarding site-formation processes and data-set
preservation. The subject of research, the Douglass Beach Site
(8SL17), is a Florida east coast underwater site consisting of two
components: an 18th century Spanish shipwreck located above an
Archaic Period inundated terrestrial site. Douglass Beach Site
research was aimed at generating principles of submerged site
formation and alteration. The primary research was conducted over
seven weeks in summer 1978.
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