y on how local politics have fueled a generation-defining national emergency. An Atlantic Edition, featuring long-form journalism by
Atlantic writers, drawn from contemporary articles or classic storytelling from the magazine's 167-year archive.
In this precise collection,
Atlantic staff writer Jerusalem Demsas turns her expertise and keen eye to the housing shortage, one of our country's most dire yet widely misunderstood public frustrations. Demsas examines how local democracies have become coconspirators in the anti-development aspirations of the very few, at the hefty expense of the many. These essays identify the inefficiencies and irrationalities of contemporary land-use politics and the stages they play out on, offering readers a refreshing and accessible guide to a generational crisis.