Q We live in a city in which we’re well aware of vast economic inequality, and as the introduction to the special journal issue on urban inequality post 2007 financial crisis states “in the decade after the start of the last great crisis of capitalism inequality has risen in cities,” that inequality isn't static. We are also now experiencing an unprecedented crisis - covid-19. How is this pandemic disproportionately affecting low-income populations or otherwise marginalized communities in our city?
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