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Elizabeth Jordie Davies; Jenn M. Jackson; David J. Knight – RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences, 2024
We consider two local reparations cases--the Evanston Restorative Housing Program and Chicago reparations for police torture survivors. We argue that the programs are shaped by the differing political opportunities, the local context, and the social location of their advocates given that one was constructed within government systems in Evanston…
Descriptors: Housing, Ownership, Residential Patterns, African Americans
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Park, Eujin – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2020
Drawing upon an ethnography of Korean American families in the Chicago suburbs, this article examines how Asian immigrant parents' engagement is shaped by race, ethnicity, class, and the suburban context. Their children's education was a driving force in parents' decisions to settle in the suburbs. Once they arrived, parents were motivated by…
Descriptors: Korean Americans, Suburbs, Residential Patterns, Racial Identification
Jacob, Brian A. – 2000
This paper exploits a natural experiment created by public housing closings in Chicago to examine the impact of residential relocation on educational outcomes. During the 1990s, the Chicago Housing Authority closed over 7,400 units of public housing as part of redevelopment and consolidation efforts. Households affected by the closures were…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Children, Elementary Secondary Education, Outcomes of Education
McArdle, Nancy – 2002
Minorities contributed to all of metro Chicago's net population growth during the 1990s, with consistently high segregation levels for blacks and increasing segregation rates for suburban Latinos. With the number of whites declining in the city and unchanged in the suburbs, Latinos have been the overwhelming driver of population growth. Asians…
Descriptors: Asian Americans, Blacks, Children, Hispanic Americans
Rubinowitz, Leonard S.; Rosenbaum, James E. – 2000
In 1976, thousands of low-income African Americans, mostly women and children, began to move out of the public housing developments of Chicago, Illinois, to the mostly white middle class suburbs. These families were part of the Gautreaux program, one of the largest court-ordered desegregation efforts in the United States. This book tells the story…
Descriptors: Blacks, Housing, Human Services, Low Income Groups
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Kerr, Louise A. – Journal of Ethnic Studies, 1975
Shows how Chicanos in Chicago adapted to and participated in the further evolution of the three major neighborhoods in which they settled and shows how distinctive neighborhood patterns partially determined the variable development of Chicano identity within the three settlements. (Author/AM)
Descriptors: Ethnic Groups, History, Mexican Americans, Migration Patterns
Chicago Urban League, IL. Dept. of Research. – 1983
This report examines one subset of the 1980 U.S. Census to assess the socioeconomic status of Blacks and Hispanics relative to non-Hispanic Whites in Chicago, and to minorities in the 10 other Standard Metropolitan Statistical Areas (SMSAs) in the United States with populations greater than 2.5 million. Eight indicators of socioeconomic disparity…
Descriptors: Blacks, Census Figures, Family Income, Hispanic Americans
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Erbe, Brigitte Mach – American Sociological Review, 1975
This investigation of the residential contiguity of socioeconomic status groups in the white and black population of the Chicago SMSA in 1970 is stated to show that although segregation indices between socioeconomic groups were comparable for whites and blacks, residential propinquity between high and low status persons differed dramatically…
Descriptors: Community Characteristics, Dropouts, Neighborhood Integration, Racial Segregation
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Bailey, Rebecca J. – Journal of Appalachian Studies, 1997
The author relates the story of her parents' outmigration in 1955 from West Virginia to Chicago and their consequent assimilation experiences. The family's problems with self-identity, group identity, discrimination, hostility, cultural differences, and language differences are described and evaluated against the literature, economic factors, and…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Cultural Differences, Relocation, Residential Patterns
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Pellow, Deborah – Human Organization, 1981
Hypothesizes that the unanticipated shifts in the character and composition of South Commons (a Chicago urban renewal project of the 1970s created to be heterogeneous in population and housing form) were due to a lack of congruence between the physical environment and the social structures it housed. (NEC)
Descriptors: Community Characteristics, Community Planning, Neighborhoods, Physical Environment
Jaret, Charles – Ethnicity, 1979
This report covers major trends in Jewish residential movement. It also covers the impact of geographic movement on forms of Jewish social activity and community life. (PR)
Descriptors: Family Mobility, Jews, Metropolitan Areas, Migration Patterns
Lazewski, Tony – 1976
Utilizing data derived from detailed personal interviews with 54 Chicago American Indian migrants (1973), Indian urban adjustment was evaluated by analyzing variations in three measures of spatial behavior--initial and current residential location; activity spaces; and residential stability. Findings revealed that: (1) 50.5 percent of the initial…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), American Indians, Comparative Analysis, Higher Education
Stuart, Guy – 2002
Using 1990 and 2000 Census data and Home Mortgage Disclosure Act data, this report documents the continuing proliferation of segregated communities across metropolitan Chicago's 6-county area during the 1990s, highlighting segregation across municipalities and school districts. Racial and ethnic segregation persist in the six-county area, though…
Descriptors: Blacks, Elementary Secondary Education, Hispanic Americans, Homeowners
Triana, Armando R. – 1980
Comprising 15.6% of the city population and 8.7% of the metropolitan area population in 1979, Hispanics are becoming a major segment of the labor force in Chicago. Based on ethnic composition data for 163 area elementary schools in 1970 and 1979, numbers of Mexicans and South and Central Americans are rising while the population of Puerto Ricans…
Descriptors: Behavior, Cubans, Cultural Differences, Demography
Crowson, Robert L. – Phi Delta Kappan, 1977
The result, for those seeking a metropolitanwide solution to school desegregation, is that neither Milliken nor the implementation of Gautreaux offers very much hope for the near future. (Author)
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Desegregation Litigation, Desegregation Methods, Elementary Secondary Education
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