Nonprofit Neighborhoods: How the U.S. Privatized the Fight against Urban Inequality

Mar 27, 2025  | 6pm ET

Lecture at GHI Washington | Speaker: Claire Dunning (University of Maryland, College Park)

2025 Spring Lecture Series: Poverty in the Twentieth Century

Please join us for the second lecture in our Spring 2025 series focusing on the history of poverty. Beginning in the 1960s, U.S. federal policy began to increasingly partner with neighborhood-based nonprofit organizations to manage the growing poverty, segregation, and activism of the postwar city. The result has been a private, partial, and invisible welfare state. This talk considers the reasons to cheer the entry of neighborhood-based organizations in local governance, and confronts how policy choices helped perpetuate racial and economic inequalities. As cities continue to face profound challenges, it is time to interrogate the solutions we have turned to for decades, understand their origins in the past, and grapple with their consequences in the present.

Doors will open at 6:00 pm and will close promptly at 6:30 pm with the beginning of the lecture. Access to the lecture after doors close will be at descretion of the GHI. Registration does not guarantee access once event capacity is reached. The lecture will be recorded and made available for viewing.

About the Series


Poverty in the Twentieth Century

In his bestseller Poverty, by America, the Pulitzer Prize–winning sociologist Matthew Desmond highlights systemic reasons for the persistence of widespread poverty in the United States. Desmond argues that it is in the interest of many affluent Americans to keep some people poor and calls for a social movement to abolish poverty. The GHI’s 2025 Spring Lecture Series addresses the ongoing debates about the causes and persistence of poverty with a historical perspective, featuring four lectures that will trace how European and North American societies treated poverty over the course of the twentieth century.

Throughout the twentieth century, poverty remained a social concern, a political talking point, and an often devastating lived reality. Industrialization had given rise to precarious urban living conditions well before the turn of the century, but even after criseslike the Great Depression and the devastation of the World Wars were overcome, the economic deprivation of significant parts of the population endured. In the propaganda battles of the Cold War, economic hardships were identified as products of either socialism or capitalism. Up to today, poverty challenges the legitimacy of political leadership by contradicting their promises of prosperity.    

These talks will feature leading scholars offering new perspectives on precarious living in modern society. Going beyond established narratives, the lectures highlight how migration decisions, non-profit organizations, social science research, and the financial industry have all shaped the crises and opportunities those living on the economic margins have faced.

Organized by Raphael Rössel and Atiba Pertilla (GHI Washington) in cooperation with the Collaborative Research Centre "Structural Change of Property"


Of Fossil Fuels and Families: How the Oil Industry Shaped Ideas of Race and Poverty in Caribbean Europe

February 27, 2025 | 6pm ET
Chelsea Schields (UC Irvine)

Nonprofit Neighborhoods: How the US Privatized the Fight against Urban Inequality

March 27, 2025 | 6pm ET
Claire Dunning (University of Maryland, College Park)

Credit's Histories: Debt, Loans, and Welfare in Twentieth-Century United States

May 1, 2025 | 6pm ET
Felix Krämer (Universität Erfurt)

From the Margins: Poverty in Divided and United Germany

June 12, 2025 | 6pm ET
Christoph Lorke (LWL-Institut für westfälische Regionalgeschichte)

About the Speaker


Claire Dunning is a historian of the United States in the twentieth-century and is currently an Associate Professor in the School of Public Policy at the University of Maryland, College Park. Her work focuses on the histories of poverty, inequality, governance, and nonprofit organizations in American cities. She is the author of Nonprofit Neighborhoods: An Urban History of Inequality and the American State (University of Chicago Press, 2022), and currently at work on a new book on philanthropy and housing policy after 1968. Dunning received her Ph.D. in history from Harvard University and then held a Postdoctoral Fellowship at Stanford University.