As Vaz highlights, early urban gamblers favored low-stakes games built around combinations of winning numbers. When these games became one of the largest economic engines in nonwhite areas like Harlem and Chicago's south side, police took notice of the illegal business—and took advantage of new opportunities to benefit from graft and other corrupt practices. Eventually, governments found an unusual solution to the problems of illicit gambling and abusive police tactics: coopting the market through legal state-run lotteries, which could offer larger jackpots than any underground game. By tracing this process and the tensions and conflicts that propelled it, Vaz brilliantly calls attention to the fact that, much like education and housing in twentieth-century America, the gambling economy has also been a form of disputed terrain upon which racial power has been expressed, resisted, and reworked.
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Release date
April 17, 2020 -
Formats
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Kindle Book
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OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9780226690582
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EPUB ebook
- ISBN: 9780226690582
- File size: 1561 KB
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No publisher statement provided -
Languages
- English
Formats
- Kindle Book
- OverDrive Read
- EPUB ebook
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Languages
- English
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