As the housing crisis continues to displace vulnerable people, this dissertation examines the criminalization of what I call in-between spaces that are located on the
fringes of urban areas. In-between spaces are defined by two types of migration patterns,
from financially vulnerable people who are priced out to others who seek the promise of
homeownership. Drawing on Black and critical geographies, criminology and sociology of
place, critical carceral studies, and political economy, I constructed countermaps that
challenge dominant understandings of systemic inequality by examining intersecting
economic, political, and social forces utilizing content analysis, autoethnography, and
mobile ethnography. I conducted two case studies on South Stockton and Elliott Avenue in
Louisville to dissect the processes undertaken to develop urban revitalization and
neighborhood improvement projects, particularly processes of “clearing out the
neighborhood” and scales of criminalization and surveillance deployed. While much
attention has been paid to gentrifying cities and areas, this dissertation examines those
forgotten places that have renewed (public and private) stakeholders’ interest and capital. City officials and private investors articulate urban revitalization projects as improving the
existing conditions of lower-income, under-resourced neighborhoods. Yet, the two case
studies in this dissertation reveal how the processes of priming the neighborhood to
prepare it for those projects often force residents to confront scales of organized state
violence and surveillance. This complication of urban renewal has important ramifications
for racialized populations who are forced to confront both organized abandonment and
organized state violence