Sharon Cornelissen
Sharon Cornelissen was a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Center, and researches the intersections of urban decline, gentrification, and racial inequality in America’s post-industrial cities. She is writing a book about gentrification after extreme depopulation, drawing on three years of ethnographic research while she lived in Brightmoor, Detroit. She is also conducting an ethnography of first-time homeowners in Brockton, Massachusetts, which is supported by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). Sharon is originally from the Netherlands and received her PhD in Sociology from Princeton University, and a Master’s in Sociology from the New School for Social Research. Her research has been published in Urban Affairs Review, Theory and Society, and Sociological Forum.
By This Author
National Politics, Neighborly Politics: The Impact of Trump’s Election on a Detroit Community
Immigrants’ Access to Homeownership in the United States: A Review of Barriers, Discrimination, and Opportunities
Housing in the Context of Neighborhood Decline
Black Immigrant Homeownership: National Trends and the Case of Metro Boston
“Remember, this is Brightmoor:” Historical Violence, Neighborhood Experiences, and the Hysteresis of Street Life
National Politics, Neighborly Politics: How Trump’s Election Impacted a Black and White Detroit Community
Turning Distaste Into Taste: Context-specific habitus and the practical congruity of culture
“Remember, this is Brightmoor:” Historical Violence, Neighborhood Experiences, and the Hysteresis of Street Life
How Histories of Neighborhood Violence and Privilege Shape Street Life: Insights from Brightmoor, Detroit
A Triple Pandemic? The Economic Impacts of COVID-19 Disproportionately Affect Black and Hispanic Households
Using the Census Bureau’s Household Pulse Survey to Assess the Economic Impacts of COVID-19 on America’s Households
COVID-19 and Financially Vulnerable Homeowners: National Trends and Voices from Brockton, Massachusetts