Ethnic Studies 5.5 (Redlining)

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