MSNBC to Document the
Conditions of the Poor in America: The Geography of Poverty
"For the first time in more that 50 years, the majority of America's public school children are living in poverty." Over the next few months
MSNBC and photographer Matt Black will document the lives of Americans living
in poverty. The project, The Geography of Poverty, will take Black
to more than 77 cities from coast to coast.
Black will begin the journey in California and travel the southwest to
Texas; then he will cover the South, the Northeast, the Great Lakes, Indian
Country in the Dakotas, and then the Northwest.
MSNBC has provided
interactive maps and charts (above) that show poverty statistics by county, city, and
state. Feature stories will be
published, and users can follow along on the routes on the Web page. Stories will chronicle issues of
transportation, education, access to healthcare, the criminal justice system,
and environmental issues. Black’s
photographs will also be featured on his Instagram account.
The Ball State University
Libraries’ Atlas Collection includes atlases that document world poverty
issues. The Penguin State of the World Atlas by Dan Smith was published in
2012 and includes maps showing income levels and economic growth, wealth
inequality, the plight of refugees, debt, malnutrition, and other issues
related to poverty. The Social Atlas of the United States by William H. Frey also
documents wealth, income, and economic issues using maps. The
Atlas of World Hunger, Atlas of the Great Irish Famine, and Atlas of Global Development also include
maps about poverty.
Atlases can be circulated
to members of the Ball State University community for 28 days or longer. Reference atlases are located in the GIS
Research and Map Collection (GRMC) on the second floor of Bracken Library.
For more information,
please contact the GRMC at 765-285-1097.
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