01711nam a22001697a 4500999001900000008004100019100002700060245011400087260002600201300003200227520103000259650009301289773002601382906001901408942000701427952010701434 c514642d514642201125b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aGraham, Leigh. 921435 aPublic housing participation in superstorm sandy recovery: Living a differentiated state in rockaway, queens  aUrban Affairs Review  a56(1), Jan, 2020: p.289-324 aRecovery experiences of public housing residents in the Rockaways, Queens (New York City (NYC)), after Superstorm Sandy suggest that living in NYC Housing Authority (NYCHA) properties creates circumscribed opportunities for local political participation, what I call a “differentiated state.” This differentiated state is constructed from four interconnected sociospatial features: (1) tenants’ stigmatized identities, (2) U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) regulations, (3) NYCHA’s “para-governmental” status, and (4) spatial concentration of the developments. I empirically demonstrate this “differentiated state” based on a grounded case study of disparities in disaster recovery participation in Rockaway. This analysis offers a new spatial lens to the scholarship on policy feedbacks and delivers a new synthesis of the limits to tenants’ political participation in conventional public housing developments in the United States, home to more than two million people. – Reproduced  aPublic housing, Disaster recovery, New York City, Participation, Policy feedbacks919464 aUrban Affairs Review  aPUBLIC HOUSING cAR 00102ddc40709388645aIIPAbIIPAd2020-11-25h56(1), Jan, 2020: p.289-324pAR124122r2020-11-25yAR