MacArthur Genius Matthew Desmond on Housing Insecurity in America
Thursday, November 29, 2018
Pulitzer Prize-winning sociologist Matthew Desmond spoke on Thursday, November 15, 2018, as part of the Bunker Hill Community College (BHCC) Compelling Conversations Series. The MacArthur “Genius Grant” sociologist is the author of the New York Times bestseller Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City that tells stories of eight families living on the edge and the landlords who control their fate.At the event, Desmond took the BHCC audience through his fieldwork and the data he gathered living in the poorest neighborhoods of Milwaukee and proposed fresh ideas for solving one of the most urgent issues facing America today–housing insecurity.
“We’ve moved to a place where eviction is overturning communities,” said Desmond. “Whatever you care about–poverty, unemployment, affordability–housing insecurity is at the root of that problem.”
“We have to find ways to document this,” he continued, urging audience members who’ve experienced housing insecurity to share their stories. “Community-based ground level research will be incredibly useful in pushing the conversation forward.”
Prior to the presentation, Desmond spoke with students studying sociology at the College before enjoying a lunch prepared by the College’s Culinary Arts students in the Thomas A. Kershaw Dining Room.
Join us for upcoming speaker events:
Wade Davis | February 28
Former NFL Player, Equality Advocate and Educator
Roxane Gay | March 7
Author and Cultural Critic
Seng Ty | April 25
Author of The Years of Zero
BHCC’s 2018-2019 One Book Selection
Sociologist and Author Matthew Desmond (@just_shelter) shares stories from his upbringing and how it inspired his landmark work Evicted with BHCC students. Join us at 1 p.m in C202. pic.twitter.com/FistEJSTQL
— BHCC Boston (@BHCCBoston) November 15, 2018
Matthew Desmond begins his Compelling Conversation talk by telling the audience he began his college career at a community college #BHCCcompelling pic.twitter.com/fJUpHaO2KQ
— BHCC Boston (@BHCCBoston) November 15, 2018
We can’t fix poverty in America without fixing housing - Matthew Desmond @just_shelter #BHCCcompelling
— BHCC Boston (@BHCCBoston) November 15, 2018