This dissertation focuses on measuring the health effects of exposure to structural racism, or racism that forms through historic and contemporary policies that produce a disparate impact by race. After defining various forms of racism and describing how structural racism relates to health outcomes, I examine three distinct measures of exposure to structural racism arising from housing and criminal justice policies in relation to birth outcomes (Aim 1) and 30-year cardiovascular risk (Aims 2 and 3). In each of these studies I hypothesize that exposure to structural racism will be more harmful to Blacks than Whites. This hypothesis is grounded in research and theory suggesting that, despite color-blind policies that on the surface appear t...