Rebecca Marchiel on Redlining, Financial Deregulation, and the Urban Reinvestment Movement

Rebecca Marchiel on Redlining, Financial Deregulation, and the Urban Reinvestment Movement

The history of red-lining is one increasingly well-known within and beyond the academy. In the 1930s, as part of an attempt to shore up the struggling economy by underwriting home mortgages, the government's Home Owners' Loan Corporation (HOLC), developed a series of guidelines and criteria for assessing the risk of lending in urban areas. HOLC criteria drew heavily on the racial logics employed by lenders, developers, and real estate appraisers. Thus, "A-rated" neighborhoods, those associated with the least risk for banks and mortgage lenders, tended to be exclusively white. While, "D"-rated areas, deemed the most-risky, included large numbers of black and/or other non-white residents. These neighborhoods were color-coded red on HOLC maps, hence the term red-lining. They were often denied home loans.

HOLC and redlining had a dramatic effect on American cities with consequences lasting to the present day. Yet, the image of the HOLC's color-coded maps suggests a more static relationship between lending and urban America than actually existed. In today's episode, Rebecca Marchiel tells a more complex and nuanced story of white and black community activists who engaged with the federal government and banks in an effort to expose redlining—in its multiple forms—and imprint their own "financial common sense" on banking. In doing so, she undercuts notions that the reality depicted in HOLC's maps was set in stone by the 1960s, when residents in Chicago's West Side first became suspicious that they had become victims of red-lining, while at the same time revealing the alternative models of financing proposed by community activists in the urban reinvestment movement.

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Holger Droessler on Coconut Colonialism, Labor, and Globalization in Samoa

Holger Droessler on Coconut Colonialism, Labor, and Globalization in Samoa

This month's episode centers Samoa, including the Pacific islands comprising the present-day independent country of Samoa and American Samoa, examining capitalism, globalization, and coconut coloniali...

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Keith Wailoo on Racial Marketing and the Rise of Menthol Cigarettes

Keith Wailoo on Racial Marketing and the Rise of Menthol Cigarettes

In 2020, George Floyd was killed by police outside a store in Minneapolis known as "the best place to buy menthols." Of Black Americans who smoke, eighty-percent smoke menthol cigarettes. In this epis...

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Jason Resnikoff on the Automation Discourse and the Meaning of Work

Jason Resnikoff on the Automation Discourse and the Meaning of Work

This month's episode takes a deep dive into the history of work and automation in the post-World War II era. It traces the discourse around automation from its origins in the factory to its wide-rangi...

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Gregg Mitman on Firestone's Rubber Empire in Liberia

Gregg Mitman on Firestone's Rubber Empire in Liberia

This month's episode focuses on a popular commodity, namely rubber. Despite consuming a large share of the world's rubber supply, the United States has long relied on the global market to meet America...

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Destin Jenkins on Municipal Debt and Bondholder Power

Destin Jenkins on Municipal Debt and Bondholder Power

Indebtedness, like inequality, has become a ubiquitous condition in and beyond the United States. Yet few have probed American cities' dependence on municipal debt. Focusing on San Francisco, this mon...

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Elizabeth Tandy Shermer on Student Loans and Higher Education

Elizabeth Tandy Shermer on Student Loans and Higher Education

It is no secret that the United States is facing a crisis with regards to higher education. In this month's episode, historian Elizabeth Tandy Shermer explains the long history that gave rise to the c...

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Justene Hill Edwards on the Slaves Economy and the Limits of Black Capitalism

Justene Hill Edwards on the Slaves Economy and the Limits of Black Capitalism

Building on and complicating recent scholarship on slavery and capitalism, Justene Hill Edwards takes listeners on a journey through the slaves' economy. From bustling urban marketplaces to back-count...

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Joshua Greenberg on the Rage for Paper Money and Monetary Knowledge in Early America

Joshua Greenberg on the Rage for Paper Money and Monetary Knowledge in Early America

For many Americans, the question--What is a dollar worth?--may sound bizarre, if not redundant. Fluctuating international exchange rates, highly volatile crypto-currencies, counterfeit money, these ar...

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