Greenlining of Staten Island

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1960s
1970s
A01=Patrick D. Nugent
affluent
affordable
Annadale
Author_Patrick D. Nugent
black
Category=NH
change
civil
class
climate
conservation
covenant
density
develop
environmental
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eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
forthcoming
fresh
greenbelt
housing
Huguenot
income
kills
landfill
litigate
litigation
nimby
public-private
race
racism
redline
reform
restrictive
rights
sprawl
sue
white
zoning

Product details

  • ISBN 9780226849478
  • Weight: 454g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Aug 2026
  • Publisher: The University of Chicago Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Illuminates how borough residents, urban planners, and politicians used environmental policy to cement a racially restrictive landscape.

Though it was once home to the world’s largest landfill, today Staten Island boasts thousands of acres of parklands, dozens of public-private conservation arrangements, and four ecological zoning districts. In this book, Patrick D. Nugent details the political forces that gave rise to this wealth of greenery in a famously dense city. He demonstrates how postwar economic and political trajectories intersected in the 1960s with the rising consciousness of environmentalism to create a distinctive laboratory in Staten Island, where white communities and politicians heeded the rising call for the preservation of green space—but often as a tool to maintain racial segregation. Ecological zoning, public-private park management, conservation easement, environmental litigation, and other strategies created a lush, discriminatory landscape. Nugent refers to these policies as greenlining.

The Greenlining of Staten Island shows that the political and environmental history of Staten Island is key to understanding how environmentalism has been used to reinforce racial discrimination, not just in New York City, but nationwide. By the mid-1970s, conservationists had embraced urban planning that preserved low-density housing districts and bolstered the sprawling and segregated landscape that took shape in metropolitan America over the coming decades. In exploring the gap between the modern environmental movement’s ambitious goals and its tangible outcomes, Nugent excavates important lessons for contemporary city dwellers debating zoning reform and planning for climate change’s impending effects.

Patrick D. Nugent is the Thomas V. Mike Miller Jr. Director of Civic Engagement at Washington College’s Starr Center for the Study American Experience, as well as assistant research professor in the Department of Political Science.

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