Abstract

Saving Kids in the Projects

Williams, Terry | April 11, 1994 issue

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Four years of work with young people in Harlem in New York City suggests that housing projects can be good places to raise children and adolescents. Projects should be viewed as centers of neighborhood renewal, islands of hope in beleaguered urban communities. Public housing projects may well be considered high-risk social environments for younger residents. Poverty, violence, unwanted pregnancy, drug use and drug dealing, and early death are just some of the dangers. These dangers are not just a consequence of the large number of poor families concentrated in the projects, they are also a result of a history of neglect.

See Also:

PUBLIC housing; SOCIAL groups; PUBLIC welfare; POOR families; NEW York (N.Y.); NEW York (State); UNITED States
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