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Showing 1 to 15 of 25 results Save | Export
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Ela Ataç Kavurmaci – Education and Urban Society, 2025
Socio-spatial inequalities are on the rise in Turkey, resulting in increasing segregation between population groups with different socioeconomic and educational backgrounds. Therefore, the link between school-based and residential segregation has become crucial for understanding urban and social divisions, specifically in the large metropolitan…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Practices, Secondary Education, Urban Areas
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Denowitz, Ronald M. – Social Forces, 1980
Presents data regarding income and educational level of Blacks who moved into previously White residential areas in New York City. Finds different patterns of racial succession in tracts near areas of Black concentration, areas distant from Black ghettos, and White residential sections with many recently constructed rental units. (Author/GC)
Descriptors: Blacks, Dropouts, Racial Composition, Racial Distribution
Taeuber, Karl – 1983
Racial residential segregation persists at high levels in all American cities with sizeable black populations. In 1980, 28 cities with black populations of more than 100,000 were home for 9.7 million blacks, more than a third of all American blacks. The average segregation index score for these cities was 81, when 100 means that every city block…
Descriptors: Black Population Trends, Racial Distribution, Racial Segregation, Residential Patterns
Winsberg, Morton D. – Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University Research Bulletin, 1979
A study was conducted of the residential patterns of a segment of the Tallahassee, Florida, black professional community. The study set out to determine the degree to which black professionals, especially black university personnel, dispersed throughout the city between 1967 and 1976. The results suggest that in the ten year interval, there was a…
Descriptors: Black Colleges, Blacks, College Faculty, Neighborhood Integration
Galster, George C. – 1978
Racial residential segregation has been a persistent feature of the American housing market. At least three distinct theories have been presented to explain this racial segregation. The "class" theory claims that, due to disproportionate overrepresentation of blacks in lower income classes, they will be overrepresented in lower quality housing…
Descriptors: Bias, Blacks, Housing Discrimination, Neighborhood Integration
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Stahura, John M. – Urban Affairs Quarterly, 1988
The increase in Black suburbanization during the 1960s and 70s is examined in the context of racial changes in earlier decades. A sample of 1,114 suburbs are examined, and regional differences between the North and South are described. Racial change occurred with greater relative frequency than in previous decades. (Author/VM)
Descriptors: Blacks, Differences, Population Distribution, Population Trends
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Spriggs, William – Phylon, 1984
Presents a measure of racial residential segregation which conforms to the traditional attributes of segregation indices, but includes sensitivity to the spatial patterns of White and non-White residence in a city. Reviews earlier measures, describes the new one, and applies it to racial housing patterns in Norfolk, Virginia, in 1890. (KH)
Descriptors: Blacks, Housing Discrimination, Measurement Techniques, Metropolitan Areas
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Winsberg, Morton D. – Urban Affairs Quarterly, 1983
During the 1970s, most Black population growth in ten Florida cities occurred in White census tracts contiguous to tracts that were at least half-Black in 1970. Urban renewal and new public housing were influential in reducing the percentage of the Black population living in Black tracts. (Author/MJL)
Descriptors: Black Population Trends, Blacks, Economic Factors, Housing
Long, Larry H.; Spain, Daphne – 1978
The purpose of this paper is to measure on a nationwide basis the proportion of annual (from 1967 to 1971) housing turnover that represented racial succession. Using data obtained from Current Population Surveys, particular emphasis is placed on how the rate of racial succession varied among regions and was different in cities, suburbs, and…
Descriptors: Blacks, Comparative Analysis, Family Characteristics, Family Mobility
Fielding, Elaine L. – 1990
The 1980 United States Census showed a marked acceleration in the suburbanization of blacks during the 1970s. This study analyzes statistical data from the 1985 American Housing Survey (AHS) National and Metropolitan Files to determine if that pattern of acceleration continued in the 1980s. These sets of data also permitted racial and…
Descriptors: Black Population Trends, Blacks, Migration Patterns, Racial Distribution
McKinney, Scott; Schnare, Ann B. – 1986
Residential segregation by race was lower in 1980 than it was in 1970, although there was almost no improvement in integration during the preceding decade. Furthermore, it was lower in 1980 than it was in 1960 for the nation as a whole, and for each of the census regions. Thus while housing markets remain highly segregated today, barriers to…
Descriptors: Change Agents, Community Change, Housing Opportunities, Human Geography
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Barnes, Annie S. – Integrated Education, 1983
Examines the role of Black real estate brokers and financiers in shaping Black residential patterns in the Atlanta area. Argues that Black expansion into formerly White neighborhoods has not contributed significantly to racial school mixing and that the development of an integrated busing system is needed. (KH)
Descriptors: Black Population Trends, Elementary Secondary Education, Housing Discrimination, Neighborhood Integration
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Clay, Phillip I. – Urban Affairs Quarterly, 1979
The Black suburbanization that is occurring represents more of a resegregation of Blacks in particular sectors of suburbia than dispersal in an open housing market. (Author/RLV)
Descriptors: Blacks, Case Studies, Equal Opportunities (Jobs), Housing Opportunities
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Galster, George C.; Keeney, W. Mark – Urban Affairs Quarterly, 1988
A cross-sectional simultaneous equation model is specified whereby metropolitan-wide levels of racial residential segregation, housing discrimination, interracial occupational dissimilarities, and Black/White mean incomes are endogenous. Results support the hypothesis of mutually causal interrelationships among these phenomena. Results of policy…
Descriptors: Blacks, Equal Opportunities (Jobs), Income, Labor Market
Hill, Richard Child – 1974
This paper consists of an exploratory analysis of factors associated with inequality in the distribution of fiscal resources--the capacity to generate public goods--among municipal governments in metropolitan areas in the U.S. Political incorporation by class and status into municipal enclaves is stated to be institutional mechanism creating and…
Descriptors: Demography, Economic Factors, Financial Support, Geographic Location
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