This article is Weinstein\u27s reflection on the Annual Sullivan Lecture entitled Crossing Two Color Lines: Interracial Marriage and Residential Segregation in Chicago by Dorothy E. Roberts (2016). INTRODUCTION My reflection on Professor Roberts\u27 Sullivan Lecture poses two questions. First, how far have we come as a nation from the hypersegregated housing patterns of the 1930s through 1960s that Professor Roberts described in her lecture? Regrettably, the answer appears to be not far at all. Further, we are today faced with a second form of hypersegregation, one based on income rather than race. Second, why have we made so little progress to date in addressing housing segregation The simple answer here, of course, is that efforts to addr...
This paper hypothesizes that segregation in US cities increases as racial inequality narrows due to ...
Using the law to promote diversity in residential communities is probably more difficult than promot...
Interview of George Galster, the Clarence Hilberry Professor of Urban Affairs at Wayne State Univers...
This article is Weinstein\u27s reflection on the Annual Sullivan Lecture entitled Crossing Two Color...
Part I highlights recent data on racially segregated neighborhoods and low rates of interracial marr...
Residential segregation and antimiscegenation were interwined means of maintaining an unequal racial...
This Comment analyzes the current state of residential racial segregation in America. It begins by t...
In his book, As Long as They Don\u27t Move Next Door, Stephen Grant Meyer examines the history of ho...
A central purpose of this chapter is to assess whether the available empirical evidence supports the...
The traditional model explaining racial discrimination has blamed discrimination by institutional ac...
Since the 1930s, federal housing policies and individual practices increased the spatial separation ...
The conflict concerning desegregation in the 1970s has roots and implications that extend beyond sch...
America is profoundly segregated along racial lines. We attend separate schools, live in separate ne...
When blacks and whites reacted so differently to the verdict of the O.J. Simpson trial, many observe...
Although segregation is no longer a legal practice, the United States, and specifically Indianapolis...
This paper hypothesizes that segregation in US cities increases as racial inequality narrows due to ...
Using the law to promote diversity in residential communities is probably more difficult than promot...
Interview of George Galster, the Clarence Hilberry Professor of Urban Affairs at Wayne State Univers...
This article is Weinstein\u27s reflection on the Annual Sullivan Lecture entitled Crossing Two Color...
Part I highlights recent data on racially segregated neighborhoods and low rates of interracial marr...
Residential segregation and antimiscegenation were interwined means of maintaining an unequal racial...
This Comment analyzes the current state of residential racial segregation in America. It begins by t...
In his book, As Long as They Don\u27t Move Next Door, Stephen Grant Meyer examines the history of ho...
A central purpose of this chapter is to assess whether the available empirical evidence supports the...
The traditional model explaining racial discrimination has blamed discrimination by institutional ac...
Since the 1930s, federal housing policies and individual practices increased the spatial separation ...
The conflict concerning desegregation in the 1970s has roots and implications that extend beyond sch...
America is profoundly segregated along racial lines. We attend separate schools, live in separate ne...
When blacks and whites reacted so differently to the verdict of the O.J. Simpson trial, many observe...
Although segregation is no longer a legal practice, the United States, and specifically Indianapolis...
This paper hypothesizes that segregation in US cities increases as racial inequality narrows due to ...
Using the law to promote diversity in residential communities is probably more difficult than promot...
Interview of George Galster, the Clarence Hilberry Professor of Urban Affairs at Wayne State Univers...