Across
- 4. maps developed by the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation showing mortgage lending risks in different neighborhoods
- 5. 1968 act banning refusal to sell or rent a dwelling to any person because of marginalized status
- 11. racial segregation that is required by law or policy
- 12. residential security maps category for the "riskiest" neighborhoods
- 15. in 2016, White families had 8 and 10 times more wealth than Black and Hispanic families, respectively
- 16. residential security maps category for "still desirable" neighborhoods
- 17. upgrading low-income neighborhoods, causing higher costs of living and resident displacement
- 18. reduced economic mobility for people of color
- 19. nonviolent protests in which participants sit and refuse to leave, often resulting in their arrest
- 20. residential security maps category for "declining" neighborhoods
Down
- 1. racially restrictive covenants became increasingly common around the United States
- 2. residential security maps category for affluent suburbs
- 3. denying a person the right to buy or rent a home due because of marginalized status
- 6. 1926 Supreme Court case that affirmed the constitutionality of racially restrictive covenants
- 7. encouraging owners to sell their properties because people of color are moving into a neighborhood
- 8. banks refusing to make loans to people living in certain geographic locations
- 9. non-white people
- 10. segregation of people into separate areas by fact rather than by law or policy
- 13. provisions in real estate deeds prohibiting sales to people from marginalized groups
- 14. between 1946-1959, 2% of homes insured by the Federal Housing Administration were available to people of color
