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Braddock, Jomills Henry, II; Gonzalez, Amaryllis Del Carmen – Teachers College Record, 2010
Background/Context: The United States is becoming increasingly racially and ethnically diverse, and increasingly racially isolated across race-ethnic boundaries. Researchers have argued that both diversity and racial isolation serve to undermine the social cohesion needed to bind American citizens to one another and to society at large. Focus of…
Descriptors: African American Students, Neighborhoods, Race, Elementary Secondary Education
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Stearns, Elizabeth – Teachers College Record, 2010
Background/Context: Perpetuation theory predicts that attending a racially segregated school paves the way for a lifetime of segregated experiences in neighborhoods, schools, and jobs. Research conducted in the 1970s and 1980s linked racial isolation in high schools with later racial isolation in many social settings among African-American…
Descriptors: African American Students, Neighborhoods, High Schools, Race
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Bay, Duane L. – Urban Review, 1973
Describes how, in California, the Santa Clara County school system recognizes a responsibility to promote integration, by operating a Planning Resources Office that works to end bias in hosing, which so often has thwarted educators because it permits them to touch only on the edges of the problem. (Author/JM)
Descriptors: Community Planning, Mexican Americans, Minority Groups, Neighborhood Integration
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Kapsis, Robert E. – Urban Affairs Quarterly, 1979
This paper assesses the relative importance of deprivation and social integration factors in accounting for neighborhood differences in feelings of powerlessness. (Author/RLV)
Descriptors: Blacks, Disadvantaged Environment, Individual Power, Neighborhood Integration
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Slawson, John – Journal of Intergroup Relations, 1975
Proposes that the utilization of the "benign quota" or the "planned interracial community" practice, wisely and cautiously administered, may actually expedite the process of desegregation: "benign quota" calls for the use of an agreed upon percentage representation of blacks (or any other minority) and whites (or any other majority), it is stated…
Descriptors: Desegregation Methods, Majority Attitudes, Minority Groups, Planned Communities
Klaff, Vivian Z. – Ethnicity, 1980
Examines some of the arguments used to support the view that residential segregation of ethnic and racial groups is necessarily disintegrative. Suggests that pluralism should receive greater attention as a model of residential segregation. (Author/JLF)
Descriptors: Acculturation, Community, Cultural Pluralism, Ethnic Groups
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Darden, Joe T. – Amerasia Journal, 1986
The report assesses residential segregation of Asians, Blacks, and Native Americans, and the relationship between their SES and the degree of minority suburbanization. The following results were found: (1) SES and education level are related to residential segregation; (2) as suburbanization increases, segregation decreases; and (3) differences in…
Descriptors: Asian Americans, Metropolitan Areas, Minority Groups, Neighborhood Integration
United Nations, New York, NY. Dept. of Economic and Social Affairs. – 1974
The Ad Hoc Expert Group on the Role of Housing in Promoting Social Integration was convened by the Secretary-General of the United Nations, in conformity with an Economic and Social Council resolution, to examine the role of housing in promoting social integration, and to prepare recommendations on this subject for consideration by Member States.…
Descriptors: Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Influences, Demography, Intergroup Relations
Kantrowitz, Nathan – 1973
This book originated with a concern for a crucial issue in planning; namely, what is the possibility of creating social policies to modify existing patterns of segregation in order to achieve social justice (however defined) in such institutions as housing or schools. Consequently, although this is an academic, ecological analysis of residential…
Descriptors: Blacks, Census Figures, Community Surveys, Ethnic Groups
White, Michael J. – 1988
This study attempts to measure the degree of assimilation exhibited by various immigrant groups, as indicated by their residential patterns. Ecological models of assimilation hold that immigrants are highly segregated from the majority population upon arrival, but that segregation declines with time in a process of residential assimilation. The…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Census Figures, Ethnic Distribution, Ethnic Groups
Grigsby, William; And Others – 1986
The economic and physical decline of urban neighborhoods has become a widespread and widely misunderstood phenomenon in post-war America. It has not been restricted to aging central cities: most growing cities and many suburbs possess areas of decay as well. After decades of changing occupancy, dwellings have fallen into disrepair, and the quality…
Descriptors: Economic Status, Housing Deficiencies, Housing Needs, Low Income Groups