A Neighborhood Divided
Community Resistance to an AIDS Care Facility
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cornell University Press
Published:18th Mar '99
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This hardback is available in another edition too:
- Paperback£28.99(9780801485794)
When a nursing facility for AIDS patients is planned for a city neighborhood, residents might be expected to respond, "Not in my backyard." But, as Jane Balin recounts in A Neighborhood Divided, when that community is known for its racial and ethnic diversity and liberal attitudes, public reaction becomes less predictable and in many ways more important to comprehend.
An ethnographer who spent two years talking with inhabitants of a progressive neighborhood facing this prospect, Jane Balin demonstrates that the controversy divided residents in surprising ways. She discovered that those most strongly opposed to the facility lived furthest away, that families with young children were evenly represented in the two camps, and that African Americans followed a Jewish community leader in opposing the home while dismissing their own minister's support of it. By viewing each side sympathetically and allowing participants to express their true feelings about AIDS, the author invites readers to recognize their own anxieties over this sensitive issue.
Balin's insightful work stresses the importance of uncovering the ideologies and fears of middle-class Americans in order to understand the range of responses that AIDS has provoked in our society. Its ethnographic approach expands the parameters of NIMBY research, offering a clearer picture of the multi-faceted anxieties that drive responses to AIDS at both the local and national levels.
Balin describes and educates.... The book provides excellent points that can help us think more creatively about how to proactively approach siting challenges.... This book presents an easy-to-read and thoughtful examination of the subject. Balin offers advice that can help planners avoid unnecessary controversy.
-- Rick Hooper * APA Journal *Jane Balin's A Neighborhood Divided is an excellent in-depth study.
-- Carrie E. Foote-Ardah * Qualitative Sociology *Jane Balin's book gives the reader a behind-the-scenes glimpse of the social dynamics behind the chilling phrase... not in my backyard.... it would probably be very beneficial to anyone considering opening any sort of AIDS care facility to read this book.... Hopefully, A Neighborhood Divided will spark more open discussion on the issues of racism and classism and how they relate to HIV/AIDS.... The epidemic forces us to confront the severe social problems and challenges of our time.
* A&U *This study is a contribution to the literature about the politics of residential care facilities, but, in addition to more conventional concerns about property values, this nursing home also tapped into anxieties about drug use, homosexuality and the protection of children.... This book does a fine job in telling the dispiriting tale—so typical of the late 1980's—of one neighborhood's conflicts about its identity as these are provoked by thinking about AIDS.
-- Timothy F. Murphy * Medical Humanities ReviISBN: 9780801436062
Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 21mm
Weight: 454g
192 pages