Today Washington, D.C., seems like a terrain of hyper-gentrification
and widespread displacement. Yet D.C. has also been and continues to be
at the forefront of grassroots experiments combating these destructive
trends and creating new, democratic worlds. Amanda Huron, an assistant
professor of interdisciplinary social sciences at the University of the
District of Columbia, brings us into this on-going history in her new
book, Carving out the Commons: Tenant Organizing and Housing Cooperatives in Washington, D.C. Read the full book review published in Washington History (Fall 2019, volume 31 (1-2), pp. 100-101) here: Huron review.