Since we do not know what you have put in your first page, it is a little difficult to tell you where to start on your second page. What we are going to do is go over some of the negative effects of gentrification and give you some links to find more information about those negative effects. Hopefully, this will help you get over your writer’s block and get past page two.
At first glance, gentrification may seem like a positive. After all, gentrification means an upward trend economically for a historically economically disadvantaged neighborhood. However, long-term residents of the area can become priced-out by this upward trend. Many are renters who can no longer afford rents, and even homeowners can become unable to afford the area due to the rising property taxes that accompany rising property values. This means that long-term residents miss out on the benefits of gentrification, which can include improved public transit, better housing, better public amenities, and even access to healthy food.
Because these areas are usually in cities, it can mean that economically disadvantaged people have to move further away from urban areas in order to be able to afford housing, but that comes with its own challenges that can range from shifting views on social justice to cultural displacement. Perhaps the biggest impact is on health. According to the CDC, gentrification has a number of associated health risks, which can be exacerbated in at-risk populations. Lack of investment leaves vulnerable areas at higher risk for a variety of lifelong diseases including cancer, birth defects, diabetes, asthma, cardiovascular disease, and even higher rates of infant mortality. Investment may bring in better resources, but it can create displacement that leads to limited access to quality schools, social networks, affordable housing, healthy food, exercise facilities, and parks.
Some of the negative effects of gentrification are more difficult to see. One of those effects is related to the traditional relationship between race and socio-economic class. When neighborhoods have to be gentrified in order to receive access to city resources, it reinforces discriminatory patterns of behavior. In addition, gentrification often forces people of color out of neighborhoods, sometimes resulting in de facto segregation of urban areas.