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As a research organization with a long history of studying social and economic conditions in the city, the Russell Sage Foundation naturally turned toward the idea of using the analytic capacities of social science to assess the shocking blow New York had suffered and analyze the underlying dimensions of what we fervently hoped would... THE ATTACK on the World Trade Center (WTC) on September 11, 2001, changed New York City forever. The twin towers, which had become one of the symbols of the city and were a workplace for more than 30,000 people, were destroyed. An entire zip code, 10048, is now, as one journalist puts it, in a kind of twilight zone and has not been used since the attack (Haberman 2003). The death toll was shattering. At latest count, 2,749 died in the attack, close to half of them New York City residents and most of the others from the surrounding suburbs.... THE TERRORIST attack on the World Trade Center (WTC) took the lives of nearly three thousand people in New York City, resulted in huge economic losses, intensified fears of international terrorism, and launched the “American war on terrorism.”
¹ The 9/11 attack and its continuing aftermath have disrupted, traumatized, and upturned the lives of many around the world.In this chapter, we quantify a few of the effects of the WTC attack on the well-being of adults and children who live in New York City. Our study is based on the New York City Social Indicators Surveys (NYSIS), the third wave... ALTHOUGH IT is usually thought of as a place where people work, lower Manhattan is also a place where tens of thousands of people live. The World Trade Center (WTC) site is bordered by two residential neighborhoods: Battery Park City, directly to the west, and Tribeca, which abuts it to the north. In many ways these communities are superficially similar. The residents of both neighborhoods are predominantly white, highly educated, and affluent. Both are, by New York standards, new communities created in the spatial reorganization of lower Manhattan that followed the construction of the twin towers. Both have an unusually... SEPTEMBER 11, 2001, began as a picture-perfect day: crystal-clear skies, beautiful ocean waves, warm temperatures, and best of all, no crowds on Rockaway’s beaches.
This was the kind of day that many Rockaway residents looked forward to, a day when the summer crowds were gone and the streets, sands, and surf belonged to the locals. Yet this particular day would forever change the way the local residents of the close-knit, predominantly Irish American and Jewish American communities on the west end of the Rockaway peninsula felt about September.On that day residents stood along the seawall facing Jamaica Bay, watching... THE ATTACK of September 11, 2001, on the World Trade Center in New York had an enormous impact on Arab Muslims in Jersey City, New Jersey. In particular, it sparked a critical turning point in the construction of Muslim identities, in-group community cohesion, and intergroup relations in Jersey City. It was not the attack itself so much as its aftermath—the state war on terrorism (with its transnational and local variations), the media images and stories linking Arab Muslims with terrorists, and the social and economic backlash against Arab Muslims—that caused such profound social effects.
In the immediate aftermath... THE TERRORIST attack on the World Trade Center had a far-reaching impact on New York’s standing as a global port and dealt a devastating blow to New York’s airline workers, the port’s largest population of employees. For passenger and freight transport, contemporary globalization is associated with the replacement of maritime workers, longshoremen, and stevedores in particular by pilots and flight attendants, airplane mechanics, ticket agents and reservation clerks, baggage handlers, security and food service workers, and many other airport-based occupations. But while the government gave significant assistance to the airline corporations in their efforts to recover from the terrorist attack,... THE CHINESE garment workers of Chinatown in New York City experienced tremendous disruptions in the aftermath of the September 11 tragedy. Chinatown itself, located less than ten blocks from the twin towers site, suffered unprecedented economic losses.
In the first eight days after the attack all vehicular and nonresidential pedestrian traffic was prohibited in the whole area south of Canal Street. In the first two weeks following the attacks the majority of garment workers could not get to work because subway stations and major roads in the community were closed or access was limited.¹ Within Chinatown, Bowery, Broadway, and Lafayette... WHEN I asked New York City yellow cab drivers to describe how their business had changed since the September 11, 2001, attack on the World Trade Center (WTC), a Bangladeshi driver expressed a sentiment shared by many of the drivers: “Before 9/11, it was beautiful. We enjoyed our job. We made some money. I would help my parents financially. Now the job, people in the street, customers, neighbors—all the people have changed.” As a researcher who has been studying New York City’s taxi industry since 1996 (Das Gupta 2001; forthcoming), I was jolted... IN THE weeks and months following 9/11, New Yorkers crowded art and photo exhibits that touched on the devastating events.
Their keen interest in graphic representations of the horror and heroism was a vivid reminder of the importance of the visual arts in the cultural and economic life of the city. But as this chapter documents, the attack on the World Trade Center damaged some important neighborhoods of the arts community. Depending on their proximity to the twin towers, artists and gallery owners experienced shocks and challenges to their livelihoods and to their ability to contribute to the city’s recovery.... IN THE hours after the 2001 terrorist attack on the World Trade Center, New York City hospitals prepared to receive the wounded. At St. Vincent’s Hospital in Greenwich Village, gurneys dressed in clean white linens were neatly arrayed along Seventh Avenue, awaiting a deluge of injured survivors. But the hospital beds remained empty; the physically wounded did not materialize. In lieu of bodily injuries, many of those who survived the attack suffered wounds that were psychological. As the loss of life, the property damage, and the terrorist threat were measured, and as the shock and fear set in, attention turned...
SO ACCUSTOMED have we grown to the image of the facades of the World Trade Center (WTC)—two tall rectangles cut against the skyline of Manhattan—that we seldom give any thought to what went on inside the towers. Although we have seen photographs of the victims of the 9/11 terrorist attack and learned about their personal lives, even now we rarely hear about the work that was done behind that curtain wall of concrete and tinted glass.The World Trade Center was above all a place of finance—not retail banking, but types of financial activity that involved trading.... IN THE wake of the physical devastation wrought by the terrorist attack on the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001, politicians and planners agreed that rebuilding the site would have to be a participatory process. There was talk of “inclusive” planning and “diverse voices” being heard. What was attacked was American democracy, argued those charged with the key decisions in the rebuilding process, and the response could only be more democracy.