First to Fourth World
I. The Author
The author of “Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American city” is none other than Matthew Desmond. Demond serves as the John Langeloth Loeb Associate Professor of Social Sciences at Harvard University. Also, the director of the Judice and Poverty Project. Both career and life paths serve as certification and prerequisites when analyzing the decrepit United States poverty. The author has multiple other credited titles with themes such as race and deprivation, which include, but are not limited too, “Evicted,” “Race in America,” “The Racial Order,” and “On the Fireline: Living and Dying with Wildland Firefighters.” Approximately, 20 percent of the sources are primary and usually directly asked by Desmond.
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299, 1) Such a statement is not only deeply intertwined with economic situations, but humanity and rights retained by the people of the United States. The issue of poverty continues to rise throughout the country, which is not only pathetic, but the statistics are even worse than during the Great Recession. The people, not just need, but must take expeditious action against the oppression from local government and business owners. Often, there are fewer regulations and restrictions to protect against abusive of the economically troubled. As proven throughout the novel, the people must bring more attention to the issue. Also, the question is raised whether or not such treatment of low-economically classed people are happy. As stated by the United States Declaration of Independence, people have the inalienable right to the pursuit of happiness. The people of the United States may not possibly be happy without house or home. The story of Scott and Teddy revealed the problems with personal financial literacy and economic decision making facing many United States people. Scott a middle-aged white man that had recently started living life on rock bottom. Scott story tells the joy and pleasure of being a nurse, yet, Scott succumbs to drugs and falls in a downward spiral towards poverty. The story and message are clear, make good financial and health decisions. The duo has been described in the book as, “one a straight Southern man, who had lived for years on the street; the other younger, gay, and a new arrival at the bottom.” (pp. 85, 3) Honestly, without the many troublesome and degrading stories, not nearly as much attention would be able to be raised towards the decrepit conditions people face in a so-called “First-World