Scenarios about 'housing discrimination'
Housing discrimination refers to the systematic practice of denying equal access to housing based on race, ethnicity, religion, gender, disability, or other protected characteristics. Throughout history, this practice has manifested through policies like redlining, restrictive covenants, and predatory lending, creating lasting patterns of residential segregation and wealth inequality. In alternate history scenarios, different approaches to fair housing legislation or the absence of civil rights movements could dramatically alter urban development patterns and socioeconomic landscapes.
What If The Fair Housing Act Never Passed?
Exploring the alternate timeline where the United States failed to enact the Fair Housing Act of 1968, potentially allowing housing discrimination and segregation to persist unabated into the 21st century.